General and abdominal adiposity and hypertension in eight world regions: a pooled analysis of 837 population-based studies with 7·5 million participants
- Authors: NCD Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC); Bin Zhou; James E Bennett; Aidan P Wickham; Rosie K Singleton; Anu Mishra; Rodrigo M Carrillo-Larco; Nayu Ikeda; Lakshya Jain; Ana Barradas-Pires; Rachel A Heap; Victor PF Lhoste; Kate E Sheffer; Nowell H Phelps; Archie W Rayner; Prof Edward W Gregg; Prof Mark Woodward; Gretchen A Stevens; Maria LC Iurilli; Prof Goodarz Danaei; Prof Mariachiara Di Cesare; PrArchie W Rayner; Prof Edward W Gregg; Prof Mark Woodward; Gretchen A Stevens; Maria LC Iurilli; Prof Goodarz Danaei; Prof Mariachiara Di Cesare; Prof Carlos A Aguilar-Salinas; Noor Ani Ahmad; Prof Pascal Bovet; Prof Zhengming Chen; Prof Albertino Damasceno; Sarah L Filippi; Prof Imre Janszky; Prof Andre P Kengne; Prof Young-Ho Khang; Prof Kamlesh Khunti; Prof Avula Laxmaiah; Lee-Ling Lim; Prof Lauren Lissner; Paula Margozzini; Prof Jean Claude Mbanya; Prof Stephen McGarvey; Prof Jonathan E Shaw; Prof Stefan Söderberg; Luis Adrián Soto-Mota; Junyang Wang; Francesco Zaccardi; Prof Majid Ezzati; Leandra Abarca-Gómez; Mohsen Abbasi-Kangevari; Shynar Abdrakhmanova; Suhaila Abdul Ghaffar; Hanan F Abdul Rahim; Zulfiya Abdurrahmonova; Niveen M Abu-Rmeileh; Benjamin Acosta-Cazares; Ishag Adam; Marzena Adamczyk; Wichai Aekplakorn; Imelda A Agdeppa; Javad Aghazadeh-Attari; Charles Agyemang; Mohamad Hasnan Ahmad; Noor Ani Ahmad; Ali Ahmadi; Naser Ahmadi; Nastaran Ahmadi; Soheir H Ahmed; Wolfgang Ahrens; Gulmira Aitmurzaeva; Kamel Ajlouni; Hazzaa M Al-Hazzaa; Halima Al-Hinai; Jawad A Al-Lawati; Rajaa Al-Raddadi; Deena Al Asfoor; Huda M Al Hourani; Monira Alarouj; Fadia AlBuhairan; Shahla AlDhukair; Mohamed M Ali; Anna V Alieva; Abdullah Alkandari; Buthaina M Alkhatib; Eman Aly; Deepak N Amarapurkar; Pilar Amiano Etxezarreta; Norbert Amougou; Lars Bo Andersen; Sigmund A Anderssen; Odysseas Androutsos; Ranjit Mohan Anjana; Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam; Elena Anufrieva; Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri; Tahir Aris; Raphael E Arku; Nimmathota Arlappa; Krishna K Aryal; Felix K Assah; Batyrbek Assembekov; Maria Cecília F Assunção; Juha Auvinen; Mária Avdičová; Kishwar Azad; Ana Azevedo; Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad; Fereidoun Azizi; Flora Bacopoulou; Suhad Bahijri; Izet Bajramovic; Nagalla Balakrishna; Mohamed Bamoshmoosh; Maciej Banach; Piotr Bandosz; José R Banegas; Rafał Baran; Carlo Maria Barbagallo; Valter Barbosa Filho; Alberto Barceló; Maja Baretić; Joaquin Barnoya; Lena Barrera; Aluisio JD Barros; Mauro Virgílio Gomes Barros; Abdul Basit; Joao Luiz Bastos; Anwar M Batieha; Aline P Batista; Rosangela L Batista; Zhamilya Battakova; Louise A Baur; Pascal M Bayauli; Silvia Bel-Serrat; Antonisamy Belavendra; Habiba Ben Romdhane; Theodora Benedek; Judith Benedics; Mikhail Benet; Gilda Estela Benitez Rolandi; James E Bennett; Michaela Benzeval; Elling Bere; Nicolas Berger; Ingunn Holden Bergh; Salim Berkinbayev; Antonio Bernabe-Ortiz; Heloísa Bettiol; Augustin F Beybey; Jorge Bezerra; Aroor Bhagyalaxmi; Santosh K Bhargava; Elysée Claude Bika Lele; Mukharram M Bikbov; Bihungum Bista; Dusko J Bjelica; Peter Bjerregaard; Espen Bjertness; Marius B Bjertness; Cecilia Björkelund; Katia V Bloch; Anneke Blokstra; Simona Bo; Martin Bobak; Lynne M Boddy; Bernhard O Boehm; Jose G Boggia; Elena Bogova; Marialaura Bonaccio; Alice Bonilla-Vargas; Herman Borghs; Steve Botomba; Rupert Bourne; Pascal Bovet; Khadichamo Boymatova; Lutgart Braeckman; Tasanee Braithwaite; Imperia Brajkovich; Francesco Branca; Hermann Brenner; Lizzy M Brewster; Yajaira Briceño; Lacramioara Brinduse; Bettina Bringolf-Isler; Miguel Brito; Johannes Brug; Anna Bugge; Frank Buntinx; Marta Buoncristiano; Con Burns; Antonio Cabrera de León; Roberta B Caixeta; Tilema Cama; Günay Can; Ana Paula C Cândido; Felicia Cañete; Mario V Capanzana; Naděžda Čapková; Eduardo Capuano; Rocco Capuano; Vincenzo Capuano; Viviane C Cardoso; Axel C Carlsson; Rodrigo M Carrillo-Larco; Felipe F Casanueva; Maribel Casas; Laura Censi; Marvin Cervantes-Loaiza; Parinya Chamnan; Snehalatha Cham
- Publication year: 2024
- Type: Articolo in rivista
- OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/664600
Abstract
Background—Adiposity can be measured using BMI (which is based on weight and height) as well as indices of abdominal adiposity. We examined the association between BMI and waist-toheight ratio (WHtR) within and across populations of different world regions and quantified how well these two metrics discriminate between people with and without hypertension. Methods—We used data from studies carried out from 1990 to 2023 on BMI, WHtR and hypertension in people aged 20–64 years in representative samples of the general population in eight world regions. We graphically compared the regional distributions of BMI and WHtR, and calculated Pearson’s correlation coefficients between BMI and WHtR within each region. We used mixed-effects linear regression to estimate the extent to which WHtR varies across regions at the same BMI. We graphically examined the prevalence of hypertension and the distribution of people who have hypertension both in relation to BMI and WHtR, and we assessed how closely BMI and WHtR discriminate between participants with and without hypertension using C-statistic and net reclassification improvement (NRI). Findings—The correlation between BMI and WHtR ranged from 0·76 to 0·89 within different regions. After adjusting for age and BMI, mean WHtR was highest in south Asia for both sexes, followed by Latin America and the Caribbean and the region of central Asia, Middle East and north Africa. Mean WHtR was lowest in central and eastern Europe for both sexes, in the high-income western region for women, and in Oceania for men. Conversely, to achieve an equivalent WHtR, the BMI of the population of south Asia would need to be, on average, 2·79 kg/m2 (95% CI 2·31–3·28) lower for women and 1·28 kg/m2 (1·02–1·54) lower for men than in the high-income western region. In every region, hypertension prevalence increased with both BMI and WHtR. Models with either of these two adiposity metrics had virtually identical C-statistics and NRIs for every region and sex, with C-statistics ranging from 0·72 to 0·81 and NRIs ranging from 0·34 to 0·57 in different region and sex combinations. When both BMI and WHtR were used, performance improved only slightly compared with using either adiposity measure alone. Interpretation—BMI can distinguish young and middle-aged adults with higher versus lower amounts of abdominal adiposity with moderate-to-high accuracy, and both BMI and WHtR distinguish people with or without hypertension. However, at the same BMI level, people in south Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the region of central Asia, Africa, have higher WHtR than in the other regions.