Supplementary Information files for: Contribution of 20-year body mass index and waist circumference history to poor cardiometabolic health in overweight/obese and normal weight adults: a cohort study
Supplementary Information files for: Contribution of 20-year body mass index and waist circumference history to poor cardiometabolic health in overweight/obese and normal weight adults: a cohort study Background and Aims: We investigated the associations of 20-year body mass index (BMI)
and waist circumference (WC) histories with risk of being 1) metabolically unhealthy
overweight/obese (MUOO) vs metabolically healthy overweight/obese (MHOO) and 2)
metabolically unhealthy normal weight (MUNW) vs metabolically healthy normal weight
(MHNW).
Methods and Results: Participants comprised 3,018 adults (2,280 males; 738 females) with
BMI and WC measured, every ~5 years, in 1991-1994, 1997-1999, 2002-2004, 2007-2009,
and 2012-2013. Mean age in 2012-2013 was 69.3 years, with a range of 59.7-82.2 years.
Duration was defined as the number of times a person was overweight/obese (or centrally
obese) across the 5 visits, severity as each person’s mean BMI (or WC), and variability as
the within-person standard deviation of BMI (or WC). At the 2013-2013 visit, participants
were categorised based on their weight (overweight/obese or normal weight; body mass
index (BMI) ≥25 kg/m2
) and health status (healthy or unhealthy; two or more of hypertension,
low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high triglycerides, high glucose, and high
homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance). Logistic regression was used to
estimate associations with the risk of being MUNW (reference MHNW) and MUOO
(reference MHOO) at the last visit. BMI and WC severity were each related to increased risk
of being unhealthy, with estimates being stronger among normal weight than
overweight/obese adults. The estimates for variability exposures became null upon
adjustment for severity. Individuals who were overweight/obese at all 5 time points had a
1.60 (0.96-2.67) times higher risk of being MUOO than MHOO compared to those who were
only overweight/obese at one (i.e., the last) time point. The corresponding estimate for
central obesity was 4.20 (2.88-6.12). Greater duration was also related to higher risk of
MUNW than MHNW.
Conclusion: Being overweight/obese yet healthy seems to be partially attributable to lower
exposure to adiposity across 20 years of adulthood. The results highlight the importance of
maintaining optimum and stable BMI and WC, both in adults who become and do not
become overweight/obese.
Funding
Body size trajectories and cardio-metabolic resilience to obesity in three United Kingdom birth cohorts