Author
Listed:
- Shaneda Warren Andersen
- Xiao-Ou Shu
- Yu-Tang Gao
- Xianglan Zhang
- Hui Cai
- Gong Yang
- Hong-Lan Li
- Yong-Bing Xiang
- Wei Zheng
Abstract
Asians have high prevalence of central obesity despite the low prevalence of general obesity. We evaluated associations between the central obesity measure, waist-hip ratio (WHR) with total and cause-specific mortality in middle-aged and elderly Chinese participants. Data arise from two prospective population-based cohort studies: the Shanghai Men’s Health Study involves 53,425 men (participation rate = 74.0%), age 40–74 at baseline, and the Shanghai Women’s Health Study involves 63,017 women (participation rate = 92.7%), age 40–70 at baseline. Information on lifestyle factors and anthropometric measurements were taken at baseline interview. Vital status and causes of death were obtained via surveys and annual linkages to relevant Shanghai registries through December 31, 2011. After median follow-up time of 7.5 years for the Shanghai Men’s Health Study and 13.2 years for the Shanghai Women’s Health Study, there were 2,058 and 3,167 deaths, respectively. In models adjusted for BMI and other potential confounders, WHR was associated with all-cause mortality; hazard ratios (HRs) (95% confidence intervals) across the first to fifth quintile increased from 1 (Reference), 1.10 (0.95,1.27), 1.21 (1.04,1.41), 1.11 (0.96,1.30), to 1.42 (1.22,1.65) in men and from 1 (Reference), 1.10 (0.96,1.27), 1.11 (0.97,1.27), 1.20 (1.05,1.37), to 1.48 (1.30,1.69) in women. WHR had a stronger association with cardiovascular disease, with multivariate-adjusted HRs of 1.5 to 1.7 observed for the highest versus lowest quintile of WHR. Dose-response associations were also seen for cancer and other-cause deaths. Stratified analyses suggested a stronger association with mortality among normal weight (BMI
Suggested Citation
Shaneda Warren Andersen & Xiao-Ou Shu & Yu-Tang Gao & Xianglan Zhang & Hui Cai & Gong Yang & Hong-Lan Li & Yong-Bing Xiang & Wei Zheng, 2015.
"Prospective Cohort Study of Central Adiposity and Risk of Death in Middle Aged and Elderly Chinese,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(9), pages 1-13, September.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0138429
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0138429
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