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Adults with abdominal obesity considered to be metabolically healthy have no greater risk for all-cause death vs. adults who are metabolically healthy and do not have abdominal obesity, according to a long-term, prospective study.
Perspective from
“The natural course of ‘healthy obesity’ is an intriguing and important factor in assessing the long-term health risk of these individuals,” Soraya Doustmohamadian, of the School of Medical Sciences at Semnan University of Medical Sciences in Iran, and colleagues wrote. “Recent data show that a considerable percentage of those categorized as [having metabolically healthy obesity/metabolically healthy abdominal obesity] at baseline lose their metabolic health in short-term follow-ups (< 10 years), and this number reaches as high as 50% during longer follow-ups ... so it would be likely that a proportion of [adults with metabolically healthy abdominal obesity] developed additional metabolic derangements over time, losing their ‘healthy obesity’ status.”
Doustmohamadian and colleagues analyzed data from 8,804 adults aged at least 30 years participating in the Tehran Lipid and Glucose Study (54.8% women; mean age, 48 years; mean BMI, 27.6 kg/m²; mean follow-up time, 12.3 years). Researchers measured weight, height and waist circumference (abdominal obesity defied as 89 cm for men and 91 cm for women), as well as physical activity, blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, lipid profile and insulin resistance via homeostatic model of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR). Metabolic health was defined as fewer than one component of metabolic syndrome, excluding waist circumference. The cohort was stratified into four phenotypes: Metabolically healthy with abdominal obesity (abdominal obesity with less than one risk factor for metabolic syndrome); metabolically unhealthy with abdominal obesity (at least two risk factors for metabolic syndrome); metabolically healthy without abdominal obesity, and metabolically unhealthy with abdominal obesity. Risk for all-cause mortality was defined as death due to any cause as a primary outcome.
Within the cohort, 54.6% had abdominal obesity at baseline; 36.5% were metabolically healthy; among those with abdominal obesity, 23.4% were metabolically healthy. During follow-up, 540 participants died (278 cardiovascular-related; 82 cancer-related; 162 from other causes).
Compared with adults without abdominal obesity who were metabolically healthy, researchers found that adults with (HR = 1.46; 95% CI, 1.05-2.02) and without (HR = 1.39; 95% CI, 1-2) abdominal obesity who were metabolically unhealthy had an increased risk for death from any cause in models adjusted for age, sex, smoking status, education level and physical activity. However, results were not statistically significant for adults with abdominal obesity considered metabolically healthy (HR = 1.35; 95% CI, 0.89-2.03).
The researchers noted that the study was not powered for fully adjusted models or sex-specific analyses, and insulin levels were measured in only 3,920 participants.
“According to our results, [the metabolically healthy abdominal obesity] phenotype was not at increased risk of all-cause mortality in a 12-year follow-up when compared to healthy non-abdominally obese individuals,” the researchers wrote. “However, considering inadequate power for fully adjusted models, these findings do not provide conclusive data in favor of [the] benign nature of [metabolically healthy abdominal obesity]. Therefore, larger studies with longer follow-ups are needed to shed more lights in this field.” – by Regina Schaffer
Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.
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