The natural course of healthy obesity over 20 years

JA Bell, M Hamer, S Sabia, A Singh-Manoux… - Journal of the American …, 2015 - jacc.org
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2015jacc.org
Intense interest surrounds the “healthy” obese phenotype, which is defined as obesity in the
absence of metabolic risk factor clustering (1). Efforts to understand the cardiovascular
consequences of healthy obesity are ongoing (2); however, its conceptual validity and
clinical value rest on the assumption that it is a stable physiological state, rather than a
transient phase of obesity-associated metabolic deterioration. Therefore, a fundamental
question is whether healthy obese adults maintain this metabolically healthy profile over the …
Intense interest surrounds the “healthy” obese phenotype, which is defined as obesity in the absence of metabolic risk factor clustering (1). Efforts to understand the cardiovascular consequences of healthy obesity are ongoing (2); however, its conceptual validity and clinical value rest on the assumption that it is a stable physiological state, rather than a transient phase of obesity-associated metabolic deterioration. Therefore, a fundamental question is whether healthy obese adults maintain this metabolically healthy profile over the long term or naturally transition into unhealthy obesity over time. Few studies have examined this; in those that have, durations of follow-up have been modest, with none exceeding 10 years (3, 4). Accordingly, we aimed to describe the natural course of healthy obesity over 2 decades in a large population-based study. The Whitehall II cohort study of British government workers provided objectively measured anthropometric and metabolic risk factor data.“Obese” was defined as body mass index $30 kg/m2.“Metabolically healthy” was defined as having< 2 of the following: high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level< 1.03 mmol/l (men) and< 1.29 mmol/l (women); blood pressure $130/85 mm Hg or use of antihypertensive medication; fasting plasma glucose level $5.6 mmol/l or use of antidiabetic medication; triacylglycerol level $1.7 mmol/l; and homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance> 2.87 (baseline 90th percentile value)(1). Participants with data on obesity and metabolic status at baseline and all follow-up examinations were analyzed. Cross-tabulations were used to describe the proportion of participants according to their baseline (1992/1994) obesity and metabolic status in each category after 5-year (1997/1999), 10-year (2002/2004), 15-year (2007/2009), and 20-year (2012/2014) follow-up examinations. Log binomial models were used to estimate age-, sex-, and ethnicity-adjusted prevalence ratios with 95% confidence intervals for unhealthy obesity at each follow-up, excluding unhealthy obese adults at baseline.
Descriptive analyses were repeated using maximum samples of healthy obese adults on the basis of duration of follow-up, allowing different baseline and follow-up points across the 20-year period. For example, the 15-year healthy obese sample included transitions from 1992/1994, to 2007/2009, or from 1997/1999 to 2012/2014. Analyses were performed using SPSS software version 19.0 (IBM, Armonk, New York), with p< 0.05 indicating statistical significance. Our primary sample (n= 2,521; 39 to 62 years of age; 75% male) included 66 healthy obese adults at baseline (36.5% of the obese). Of these subjects, 21 (31.8%) were unhealthy obese after 5 years, and 27 (40.9%), 23 (34.8%), and 34 (51.5%) were unhealthy obese after 10, 15, and 20 years, respectively (Table 1). The proportion of healthy obese adults who were healthy nonobese at follow-up was 6.1%, 4.5%, 6.1%, and 10.6% after 5, 10, 15, and 20 years respectively. The age-, sex-, and ethnicity-adjusted prevalence of unhealthy obesity after 5 years was 11.80 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 7.28 to 19.11) times higher in baseline healthy obese adults compared with healthy nonobese subjects. The corresponding prevalence ratio was 8.09 (95% CI: 5.54 to 11.81) after 10 years, 6.64 (95% CI: 4.43 to 9.96) after 15 years, and 7.74 (95% CI: 5.53 to 10.85) after 20 years. Subsidiary analyses using maximum samples produced similar results. Of the 389 healthy obese adults with 5-year data, 35.2% were unhealthy obese after 5 years. This proportion was 34.7% after 10 years (sample n= 317), 37.9% after 15 years (sample n= 224), and 48.1% after 20 …
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