Abstract

Objective To determine whether arm circumference-to-height ratio (AHtR) predicts adolescents' cardiometabolic risk and how its predictive statistics compare to those of body mass index (BMI) percentile. Methods Pooled data for adolescents (N = 12,269, 12–18 years) from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, U.S., 1999–2014, were analyzed. For each of the eight cardiometabolic variables, borderline-risk and high-risk were considered unhealthy, and being unhealthy on any variable was considered “unhealthy overall” in terms of cardiometabolic risk. Area under the curve and R 2 were used to compare BMI percentile and AHtR for accuracy in predicting risk. Results Female AHtR ≥ 0.19 and BMI percentile ≥ 94 and male AHtR ≥ 0.16 and BMI percentile ≥ 64 predicted a probability of >0.7 being unhealthy overall. AHtR predicted overall risk and unhealthy levels of six variables more accurately than BMI percentile. Significant differences were overall risk (χ 2 = 4.18; p=0.041), total cholesterol (χ 2 = 8.68; p=0.003), glycated hemoglobin (χ 2 = 5.24; p=0.022), and systolic pressure (χ 2 = 5.10; p=0.024). AHtR had higher accuracy in predicting high-density cholesterol, fasting glucose, glycated hemoglobin, and systolic/diastolic pressures plus higher specificity in predicting all variables except triglycerides. BMI percentile had higher sensitivity for all variables. Sensitivity and accuracy were higher for males. No significant race/ethnicity differences were observed. Conclusions Without needing adjustment for age and weight, AHtR can predict some cardiometabolic risk factors of adolescents, especially of males, more accurately than BMI percentile, thus facilitating population risk estimation and early interventions. Further research is required to validate these findings in younger children.

Highlights

  • Child and adolescent overweight and obesity significantly increase the risk of premature mortality, morbidity, and related outcomes [1]

  • Research has revealed that body mass index (BMI) is correlated with fat mass and percentage of body fat at 0.90 and 0.69, respectively, so it is highly correlated with waist circumference and moderately correlated with other measures of adiposity

  • Comparable cardiometabolic cutoffs of BMI percentiles were ≥94th for females and ≥64th for males, with a ≥0.73 probability of being unhealthy on any of the eight cardiometabolic variables

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Summary

Introduction

Child and adolescent overweight and obesity significantly increase the risk of premature mortality, morbidity (e.g., diabetes, asthma, and hypertension), and related outcomes [1]. No studies have examined the potential of mid-upper-arm circumference or AHtR to predict cardiometabolic risk of children/adolescents.

Results
Conclusion
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