Abstract

To re-analyse the previously reported linear relation between Quetelet's body mass index (BMI) and mortality, among men from the Adventist Mortality Study after accounting for effects due to age at measurement of BMI, smoking history and race. Prospective cohort study. To specifically account for effects due to age at measurement of BMI, smoking history and race, our methodology includes: 1, computing hazard ratios for BMI quintiles from a proportional hazard regression, with 'time on study' as the time variable, and age at baseline as a covariate; 2, conducting separate analyses of middle-aged (age 30-54y) and older (age 55-74y) men; and 3, restriction of the analyses to never-smoking, non-Hispanic white males. 5062 men (age: 30-74 y, BMI: 14-44 kg/m2) from the Adventist Mortality Study. Subjects reported data on anthropometric, demographic, medical, dietary and lifestyle characteristics at baseline and were enrolled in mortality surveillance during a 26y study period (1960-1985). During the early years of follow-up (years 1-8, 9-14), we found some evidence of excess risk among the leanest men that was probably due to the effects of antecedent illness. During the later years of follow-up (years 15-26), effects due to antecedent illness were not apparent and a significant positive, linear relation between BMI and all-cause mortality was consistently found among middle-aged (30-54 y) and older (55-74 y) men. Disease-specific analyses of the later follow-up (years 15-26) revealed that the positive linear trends with all-cause mortality, were primarily due to excess risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer among the heavier men. Among older men, a significant inverse relation between BMI and respiratory disease mortality risk was identified during later follow-up (years 15-26), but this effect attenuated after restriction of the analyses to men with no baseline history of respiratory disease. The re-analysis confirms the findings of a positive, linear relation between BMI and all-cause mortality, reported in the original study.

Keywords

MedicineDemographyBody mass indexHazard ratioProportional hazards modelAnthropometryGerontologyCohortCohort studyConfidence intervalInternal medicine

MeSH Terms

AdultAgedBody Mass IndexCardiovascular DiseasesHumansMaleMiddle AgedMortalityNeoplasmsReligionRespiratory Tract DiseasesRisk FactorsSmoking

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Publication Info

Year
1998
Type
article
Volume
22
Issue
6
Pages
544-548
Citations
34
Access
Closed

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Cite This

K D Lindsted, Pramil N. Singh (1998). Body mass and 26 y risk of mortality among men who never smoked: a re-analysis among men from the Adventist Mortality Study. International Journal of Obesity , 22 (6) , 544-548. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ijo.0800623

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/sj.ijo.0800623
PMID
9665675

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%