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Título
Cardiovascular risk of metabolically healthy obesity in two european populations: Prevention potential from a metabolomic study
Autor
Año del Documento
2023
Editorial
BMC
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
Cardiovascular Diabetology, Abril 2023, vol.22 n.1, 82
Résumé
Background A new definition of metabolically healthy obesity (MHO) has recently been proposed to stratify thevheterogeneous mortality risk of obesity. Metabolomic profiling provides clues to metabolic alterations beyond clinical definition. We aimed to evaluate the association between MHO and cardiovascular events and assess its metabolomic pattern.
Methods This prospective study included Europeans from two population-based studies, the FLEMENGHO and the Hortega study. A total of 2339 participants with follow-up were analyzed, including 2218 with metabolomic profiling. Metabolic health was developed from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey and the UK biobank cohorts and defined as systolic blood pressure < 130 mmHg, no antihypertensive drugs, waist-tohip ratio < 0.95 for women or 1.03 for men, and the absence of diabetes. BMI categories included normal weight, overweight, and obesity (BMI < 25, 25–30, ≥ 30 kg/m2). Participants were classified into six subgroups according to BMI category and metabolic healthy status. Outcomes were fatal and nonfatal composited cardiovascular events.
Results Of 2339 participants, the mean age was 51 years, 1161 (49.6%) were women, 434 (18.6%) had obesity, 117 (5.0%) were classified as MHO, and both cohorts had similar characteristics. Over a median of 9.2-year (3.7–13.0) follow-up, 245 cardiovascular events occurred. Compared to those with metabolically healthy normal weight, individuals with metabolic unhealthy status had a higher risk of cardiovascular events, regardless of BMI category (adjusted HR: 3.30 [95% CI: 1.73–6.28] for normal weight, 2.50 [95% CI: 1.34–4.66] for overweight, and 3.42 [95% CI: 1.81–6.44] for obesity), whereas those with MHO were not at increased risk of cardiovascular events (HR: 1.11 [95% CI: 0.36–3.45]). Factor analysis identified a metabolomic factor mainly associated with glucose regulation, which was
associated with cardiovascular events (HR: 1.22 [95% CI: 1.10–1.36]). Individuals with MHO tended to present a higher.
Palabras Clave
Cardiovascular risk, Diabetes, Obesity, Metabolically healthy obesity, Metabolomics
ISSN
1475-2840
Revisión por pares
SI
Patrocinador
The work was supported by Internal Funds KU Leuven (STG-18-00379), the European Research Area Net for Cardiovascular Diseases (JTC2017- 046-PROACT), the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación of Spain (PID2019- 108973RB-C21 and C22 and PCIN2017-117), the Generalitat Valenciana of Spain (GV/2020/048), and GUTMOM (INTIMIC-085) from the EU Joint Programming Initiative Healthy Diet Healthy Life (HDHL).
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
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