Abstract

BackgroundA Body Shape Index (ABSI) had been derived from a study of the United States National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2004 mortality data to quantify the risk associated with abdominal obesity (as indicated by a wide waist relative to height and body mass index). A national survey with longer follow-up, the British Health and Lifestyle Survey (HALS), provides another opportunity to assess the predictive power for mortality of ABSI. HALS also includes repeat observations, allowing estimation of the implications of changes in ABSI.Methods and FindingsWe evaluate ABSI z score relative to population normals as a predictor of all-cause mortality over 24 years of follow-up to HALS. We found that ABSI is a strong indicator of mortality hazard in this population, with death rates increasing by a factor of 1.13 (95% confidence interval, 1.09–1.16) per standard deviation increase in ABSI and a hazard ratio of 1.61 (1.40–1.86) for those with ABSI in the top 20% of the population compared to those with ABSI in the bottom 20%. Using the NHANES normals to compute ABSI z scores gave similar results to using z scores derived specifically from the HALS sample. ABSI outperformed as a predictor of mortality hazard other measures of abdominal obesity such as waist circumference, waist to height ratio, and waist to hip ratio. Moreover, it was a consistent predictor of mortality hazard over at least 20 years of follow-up. Change in ABSI between two HALS examinations 7 years apart also predicted mortality hazard: individuals with a given initial ABSI who had rising ABSI were at greater risk than those with falling ABSI.ConclusionsABSI is a readily computed dynamic indicator of health whose correlation with lifestyle and with other risk factors and health outcomes warrants further investigation.

Highlights

  • A Body Shape Index (ABSI) was developed as a way to quantify the risk associated with abdominal obesity, as indicated by a wide waist relative to height and body mass index (BMI) [1]

  • Average ABSI was associated with substantially higher risk of death in the United States (USA) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2004 sample, and the excess mortality hazard associated with high ABSI was greater than that associated with above-average body mass index (BMI) or waist circumference (WC) [1]

  • Anthropometric Risk Factors for Mortality in HALS1 The British HALS1 sample was, on average, considerably thinner and narrower-waisted than the later USA NHANES 1999–2004 sample (Table 1). Their mean ABSI was lower than seen in NHANES, meaning that waist circumferences in Health and Lifestyle Survey (HALS) averaged lower than would have been expected for their weight based on the NHANES sample

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Summary

Introduction

A Body Shape Index (ABSI) was developed as a way to quantify the risk associated with abdominal obesity, as indicated by a wide waist relative to height and body mass index (BMI) [1]. Average ABSI was associated with substantially higher risk of death in the United States (USA) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2004 sample, and the excess mortality hazard associated with high ABSI was greater than that associated with above-average body mass index (BMI) or waist circumference (WC) [1]. A Body Shape Index (ABSI) had been derived from a study of the United States National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2004 mortality data to quantify the risk associated with abdominal obesity (as indicated by a wide waist relative to height and body mass index). HALS includes repeat observations, allowing estimation of the implications of changes in ABSI

Methods
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