The dynamic association of body mass index and all-cause mortality in multiple cohorts and its impacts.

IF 3.6 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology Pub Date : 2014-10-24 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.1186/1742-7622-11-17
Jianghua He, Qing Yu, Huiquan Zhang, Jonathan D Mahnken
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background: In the literature, different shapes of associations have been found between body mass index (BMI) and mortality and some of the findings were opposite to each other. The association of BMI and mortality in a single cohort has been found to be dynamic that can lead to different findings under different settings. The identified dynamic features were consistent with the heterogeneity in the literature. It is meaningful to find out whether such dynamic associations exist in other populations.

Methods: Data of six different cohorts were used for analysis and comparison. The proportional hazards assumptions for BMI in Cox models were tested to identify dynamic associations in each cohort. Time-dependent covariates Cox model was used to model the association of BMI and mortality risk as functions of follow-up time. The Cox model was applied to the pooled data with survival times censored at 5 to 40 years to show the potential impact of the dynamic association on traditional Meta-analysis.

Results and discussion: Dynamic associations were identified in six models (4 for men and 2 for women), four of which showed the same changing pattern: the elevated mortality risk for low BMI decreased while that for high BMI increased with follow-up time. When the Cox model was applied to the pooled data excluding the largest and also the shortest cohort, low BMI was but high BMI was not associated with high mortality for men with censoring at 5 years but the association for low BMI became weaker and that for high BMI became much stronger when censoring time was at 40 years. The dynamic association indicated that shorter studies tend to obtain inverse associations between BMI and mortality while longer studies tend to obtain J-shaped associations.

Conclusions: Different or even opposite results about body weight and mortality in the literature may be in part due to the underlying dynamic association of BMI and mortality. The dynamic features need to be taken into consideration in future studies.

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多组人群体重指数与全因死亡率的动态关联及其影响。
背景:在文献中,人们发现身体质量指数(BMI)与死亡率之间存在不同形式的关联,其中一些发现是相反的。在单一队列中,BMI和死亡率的关联是动态的,在不同的环境下可能会导致不同的结果。识别的动态特征与文献中的异质性一致。了解这种动态关联在其他种群中是否存在是有意义的。方法:采用6个不同队列的资料进行分析比较。对Cox模型中BMI的比例风险假设进行检验,以确定每个队列中的动态关联。时间相关协变量采用Cox模型对BMI与死亡风险随随访时间的关系进行建模。将Cox模型应用于生存时间为5至40年的汇总数据,以显示动态关联对传统meta分析的潜在影响。结果和讨论:在6个模型(男性4个,女性2个)中发现了动态关联,其中4个模型显示出相同的变化模式:随着随访时间的推移,低BMI的死亡率升高风险降低,而高BMI的死亡率升高风险增加。当Cox模型应用于汇总数据排除最大和最短的队列时,低BMI和高BMI与男性的高死亡率没有联系在5岁时进行审查,但低BMI的联系变弱而高BMI的联系在审查时间为40岁时变得更强。动态关联表明,较短的研究倾向于获得BMI与死亡率之间的负相关,而较长的研究倾向于获得j型相关。结论:文献中关于体重和死亡率的不同甚至相反的结果可能部分是由于BMI和死亡率潜在的动态关联。在今后的研究中,需要考虑其动态特性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology Medicine-Epidemiology
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
4.30%
发文量
9
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: Emerging Themes in Epidemiology is an open access, peer-reviewed, online journal that aims to promote debate and discussion on practical and theoretical aspects of epidemiology. Combining statistical approaches with an understanding of the biology of disease, epidemiologists seek to elucidate the social, environmental and host factors related to adverse health outcomes. Although research findings from epidemiologic studies abound in traditional public health journals, little publication space is devoted to discussion of the practical and theoretical concepts that underpin them. Because of its immediate impact on public health, an openly accessible forum is needed in the field of epidemiology to foster such discussion.
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