Authors |
Yusuf
S, Hawken S, Ounpuu S, Bautista L, Franzosi MG, Commerford P, Lang CC,
Rumboldt Z, Onen CL, Lisheng L, Tanomsup S, Wangai P Jr, Razak F, Sharma
AM, Anand SS; INTERHEART Study Investigators.
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Abstract |
BACKGROUND:
Obesity is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, but the most
predictive measure for different ethnic populations is not clear. We aimed
to assess whether markers of obesity, especially waist-to-hip ratio, would
be stronger indicators of myocardial infarction than body-mass index (BMI),
the conventional measure.
METHODS: We did a standardised case-control study of acute myocardial
infarction with 27 098 participants in 52 countries (12,461 cases and
14,637 controls) representing several major ethnic groups. We assessed
the relation between BMI, waist and hip circumferences, and waist-to-hip
ratio to myocardial infarction overall and for each group. FINDINGS: BMI
showed a modest and graded association with myocardial infarction (OR
1.44, 95% CI 1.32-1.57 top quintile vs bottom quintile before adjustment),
which was substantially reduced after adjustment for waist-to-hip ratio
(1.12, 1.03-1.22), and non-significant after adjustment for other risk
factors (0.98, 0.88-1.09). For waist-to-hip ratio, the odds ratios for
every successive quintile were significantly greater than that of the
previous one (2nd quintile: 1.15, 1.05-1.26; 3rd quintile: 1.39; 1.28-1.52;
4th quintile: 1.90, 1.74-2.07; and 5th quintiles: 2.52, 2.31-2.74 [adjusted
for age, sex, region, and smoking]). Waist (adjusted OR 1.77; 1.59-1.97)
and hip (0.73; 0.66-0.80) circumferences were both highly significant
after adjustment for BMI (p<0.0001 top vs bottom quintiles). Waist-to-hip
ratio and waist and hip circumferences were closely (p<0.0001) associated
with risk of myocardial infarction even after adjustment for other risk
factors (ORs for top quintile vs lowest quintiles were 1.75, 1.33, and
0.76, respectively). The population-attributable risks of myocardial infarction
for increased waist-to-hip ratio in the top two quintiles was 24.3% (95%
CI 22.5-26.2) compared with only 7.7% (6.0-10.0) for the top two quintiles
of BMI.
INTERPRETATION: Waist-to-hip ratio shows a graded and highly significant
association with myocardial infarction risk worldwide. Redefinition of
obesity based on waist-to-hip ratio instead of BMI increases the estimate
of myocardial infarction attributable to obesity in most ethnic groups.
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