Overweight and obesity increase the risk of coronary heart disease: A pooled analysis of 30 prospective studies


Autoria(s): Bogers, R. P.; Hoogenveen, R. T.; Boshuizen, H.; Woodward, M.; Knekt, P.; Van Dam, R. M.; Hu, F. B.; Visscher, T. L. S.; Menotti, A.; Thorpe, R. J.; Jamrozik, K.; Bemelmans, W. J. E.
Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

The importance of overweight as a risk factor for coronary heart disease (CHD) remains unsettled. We estimated the relative risk (RR) for CHD associated with underweight (body mass index, BMI < 20 kg/m2), overweight (25 – 30 kg/m2) and obesity (= 30 kg/m2), compared with normal weight (20 – 25 kg/m2) in a random effects meta-analysis of 30 prospective studies, including 389,239 healthy, predominantly Caucasian persons. We also explored sources of heterogeneity between studies and examined effects of systematic adjustment for confounding and intermediary variables. Pooled age-, sex- and smoking-adjusted RRs (95% confidence interval) for overweight, obesity and underweight compared with normal weight were 1.33 (1.24 – 1.43), 1.69 (1.44 – 1.99) and 1.01 (0.85 – 1.20), respectively. Stratified analyses showed that pooled RRs for BMI were higher for studies with longer follow-up (= vs. < 15 years) and younger populations (< vs. = 60 years). Additional adjustment for blood pressure, cholesterol levels and physical activity decreased the RR per 5 BMI units from 1.28 (1.21 – 1.34) to 1.16 (1.11 – 1.21). We conclude that overweight and obesity are associated with a substantially increased CHD risk in Caucasians, whereas underweight is not. Prevention and reduction of overweight and obesity, therefore, remain of importance for preventing CHD.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57069

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Public, Environmental & Occupational Health #CX
Tipo

Conference Paper