Assessing the health and economic burden of obesity-related complications in East-Asian populations: implementation of risk equations in the Core Obesity Model for Japan and model validation

Ichiro Tatsuno, L. Gerlier, Anamaria-Vera Olivieri, James Baker-Knight, Mark Lamotte
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Abstract

Obesity is associated with a significant clinical and economic burden and its prevalence has reached epidemic proportions worldwide. An ethnicity-specific impact of excess weight has been demonstrated, with Asian individuals exhibiting weight-related health problems at lower body mass indexes (BMIs) than Caucasians. We aimed to adapt the core obesity model (COM) to predict incidences of weight-associated diseases, including type 2 diabetes, acute coronary syndrome (ACS), stroke, cancers, sleep apnoea, hyperuricaemia/gout, total knee replacement (TKR) and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in a Japanese population.Literature was searched to identify studies reporting the association between risk factors and comorbidities in Japanese populations. Data were extracted to update the COM risk prediction equations. Internal and external validation were performed.Overall, good internal validity was achieved, with mild underestimation for diabetes, cardiovascular and all-cause death taken together (ordinary least squares linear regression [OLS-LRL] 0.8844), moderate overestimation of TKR and cancers (OLS-LRL 1.267) and a slight underestimation for NAFLD and hyperuricaemia (OLS-LRL 0.934). External validation results were aligned with known geographical patterns: complications occurred at lower BMI in Japanese individuals, with a threefold higher incidence of diabetes and twofold higher obstructive sleep apnoea, gout prevalence and colorectal cancer at equal BMI. Conversely, the 10-year cumulative ACS incidences predicted in a Japanese population were less than half of those in a Western population.The Japanese COM adaptation addresses ethnicity-specific patterns of overweight/obesity, with better sensitivity to lower BMIs for several associated complications. It may support regional public health policy and research.
评估东亚人群肥胖相关并发症的健康和经济负担:日本核心肥胖模型中风险方程的实施及模型验证
肥胖症带来了巨大的临床和经济负担,其发病率在全球范围内已达到流行病的程度。超重对不同种族的影响已经得到证实,与白种人相比,亚洲人在体重指数(BMI)较低的情况下就会出现与体重相关的健康问题。我们的目的是调整核心肥胖模型(COM),以预测日本人群中与体重相关疾病的发病率,包括 2 型糖尿病、急性冠状动脉综合征(ACS)、中风、癌症、睡眠呼吸暂停、高尿酸血症/痛风、全膝关节置换术(TKR)和非酒精性脂肪肝(NAFLD)。提取数据以更新COM风险预测方程。总体而言,内部有效性良好,糖尿病、心血管疾病和全因死亡的预测值合计为轻度低估(普通最小二乘法线性回归[OLS-LRL] 0.8844),TKR和癌症的预测值为中度高估(OLS-LRL 1.267),非酒精性脂肪肝和高尿酸血症的预测值为轻度低估(OLS-LRL 0.934)。外部验证结果与已知的地理模式一致:日本人的体重指数越低,并发症发生率越高,在体重指数相同的情况下,糖尿病发病率高出三倍,阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停、痛风发病率和结直肠癌发病率高出两倍。相反,在日本人群中预测的 ACS 10 年累计发病率不到西方人群的一半。日本 COM 适应症针对特定种族的超重/肥胖模式,对较低的 BMI 更敏感,可用于几种相关并发症。它可为地区公共卫生政策和研究提供支持。
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