A longer duration of obesity is associated with greater cardiometabolic disease risk factors, according to a new study published in PLOS Medicine.
Risk stratification for cardiometabolic disease is not the same for all people with obesity, defined here as individuals with a body mass index (BMI) greater than 30 kg/m2. The amount of time a person has spent with obesity over their life is suspected to be a factor in cardiometabolic risk variation for this population.
For this study, researchers collected data from three British birth cohort studies to derive BMI trajectories between the ages of 10 and 40 for 20,746 participants. The cohort was 49.1% male and 97.2% white British. The team calculated total time spent and severity of obesity as well as blood pressure, cholesterol, and glycated hemoglobin, or blood sugar, measurements, which are linked to cardiometabolic disease risk factors.
The researchers found that a longer duration of obesity was associated with worse values for all measured cardiometabolic risk factors. In particular, the association was strong for glycated hemoglobin measures: less than 5 years of obesity was linked to 5% higher blood sugar levels (95% confidence interval [CI] 4-6) and 20 to 30 years of obesity had 20% higher levels (95% CI 17-23) compared with individuals with no years of obesity. This risk remained after adjustment for obesity severity.
Higher cholesterol and blood pressure levels were also associated with obesity duration, but these results were attenuated when adjusting for obesity severity.
“Our findings suggest that health policy recommendations aimed at preventing early obesity onset, and therefore reducing lifetime exposure, may help reduce risk of diabetes, independently of obesity severity,” the authors said in a press release.
New research shows that cardiometabolic disease risk factors increase with the duration of #obesity. However, the typical recommended changes, e.g., such as eating healthier, only exacerbate the problem. https://t.co/8y1qFlRNa3 via @healthline
— Stewart Lonky, MD (@LonkyMD) December 9, 2020
New #longitudinal research, published in @PLOSMedicine, explores the relationship between obesity duration & cardiometabolic disease risk factors.
The study used our harmonised dataset of BMI measures from the 1946, 1958 & 1970 British birth cohorts. https://t.co/Si0k9PnU1m
— CLOSER (@CLOSER_UK) December 9, 2020
Credit: Original article published here.