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Central fatness and risk of all cause mortality: systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of 72 prospective cohort studies

BMJ 2020; 370 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m3324 (Published 23 September 2020) Cite this as: BMJ 2020;370:m3324
  1. Ahmad Jayedi, doctoral student of nutrition1 2,
  2. Sepideh Soltani, research fellow3 4,
  3. Mahdieh Sadat Zargar, masters student of nursing5,
  4. Tauseef Ahmad Khan, postdoctoral fellow6 7 8,
  5. Sakineh Shab-Bidar, associate professor of nutrition2
  1. 1Food Safety Research Center (salt), Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran
  2. 2Department of Community Nutrition, School of Nutritional Science and Dietetics, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, PO Box 14155/6117, Tehran, Iran
  3. 3Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, Iran
  4. 4Nutrition and Food Security Research Center, Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, Iran
  5. 5Nursing Care Research Center, Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran
  6. 6Clinical Nutrition and Risk Factor Modification Centre, St Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  7. 7Department of Nutritional Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  8. 8Toronto 3D Knowledge Synthesis & Clinical Trials Unit, St Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  1. Correspondence to: S Shab-Bidar s_shabbidar{at}tums.ac.ir
  • Accepted 11 August 2020

Abstract

Objective To quantify the association of indices of central obesity, including waist circumference, hip circumference, thigh circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, waist-to-thigh ratio, body adiposity index, and A body shape index, with the risk of all cause mortality in the general population, and to clarify the shape of the dose-response relations.

Design Systematic review and meta-analysis.

Data sources PubMed and Scopus from inception to July 2019, and the reference lists of all related articles and reviews.

Eligibility criteria for selecting studies Prospective cohort studies reporting the risk estimates of all cause mortality across at least three categories of indices of central fatness. Studies that reported continuous estimation of the associations were also included.

Data synthesis A random effects dose-response meta-analysis was conducted to assess linear trend estimations. A one stage linear mixed effects meta-analysis was used for estimating dose-response curves.

Results Of 98 745 studies screened, 1950 full texts were fully reviewed for eligibility. The final analyses consisted of 72 prospective cohort studies with 2 528 297 participants. The summary hazard ratios were as follows: waist circumference (10 cm, 3.94 inch increase): 1.11 (95% confidence interval 1.08 to 1.13, I2=88%, n=50); hip circumference (10 cm, 3.94 inch increase): 0.90 (0.81 to 0.99, I2=95%, n=9); thigh circumference (5 cm, 1.97 inch increase): 0.82 (0.75 to 0.89, I2=54%, n=3); waist-to-hip ratio (0.1 unit increase): 1.20 (1.15 to 1.25, I2=90%, n=31); waist-to-height ratio (0.1 unit increase): 1.24 (1.12 to 1.36, I2=94%, n=11); waist-to-thigh ratio (0.1 unit increase): 1.21 (1.03 to 1.39, I2=97%, n=2); body adiposity index (10% increase): 1.17 (1.00 to 1.33, I2=75%, n=4); and A body shape index (0.005 unit increase): 1.15 (1.10 to 1.20, I2=87%, n=9). Positive associations persisted after accounting for body mass index. A nearly J shaped association was found between waist circumference and waist-to-height ratio and the risk of all cause mortality in men and women. A positive monotonic association was observed for waist-to-hip ratio and A body shape index. The association was U shaped for body adiposity index.

Conclusions Indices of central fatness including waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, waist-to-thigh ratio, body adiposity index, and A body shape index, independent of overall adiposity, were positively and significantly associated with a higher all cause mortality risk. Larger hip circumference and thigh circumference were associated with a lower risk. The results suggest that measures of central adiposity could be used with body mass index as a supplementary approach to determine the risk of premature death.

Introduction

Two recent comprehensive meta-analyses assessed the association of general adiposity, represented by body mass index, with the risk of all cause mortality in the general population.12 The authors included more than 200 prospective cohort studies and the results indicated that a U shaped and a J shaped association existed between body mass index and the risk of all cause mortality in the general population and healthy never smokers, respectively. The lowest risk was observed for a body mass index of 22-23 in healthy never smokers. Body mass index is easy to obtain and so is the most frequent anthropometric measure used to investigate obesity-mortality and obesity-morbidity associations.

The validity of body mass index as an appropriate indicator of obesity has been questioned.3 Research suggests that body mass index does not differentiate between lean body mass and fat mass; therefore, when using body mass index as a measure, inaccurate assessment of adiposity could occur.4 Additionally, the most important limitation of body mass index is that it does not reflect regional body fat distribution. Existing evidence suggests that central obesity and abdominal deposition of fat is more strongly associated with cardiometabolic risk factors56 and chronic disease risk78910 than overall obesity. Furthermore, most studies, especially large scale cohort studies, that have assessed the association of body mass index with the risk of mortality have used self-report height and weight to calculate body mass index.1 Participants tend to under report their weight and over report their height, which could result in inaccurate assessment of adiposity.11 In contrast, most studies assessing the association of central fatness with the risk of chronic disease used measured anthropometry.

Taking this evidence into account, indices of central obesity might be more accurate than body mass index when estimating adiposity, and therefore could be more closely and strongly associated with the risk of mortality. Despite the evidence, systematic reviews and meta-analyses are lacking that comprehensively assess the association of indices of central fatness with the risk of all cause mortality in the general population. Only a few meta-analyses of prospective cohort studies have assessed the association of indices of central adiposity with all cause mortality risk121314; however, they have important limitations. For example, they were performed in older populations,13 they did not perform non-linear dose-response analyses,14 or they did not include most of the evidence.12 Another pooled analysis of 11 prospective cohort studies assessed the association of waist circumference with the risk of all cause mortality,15 but they only included studies from Western countries.

We aimed to perform a systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies to investigate the association of indices of central fatness with the risk of all cause mortality in the general population, in never smokers, and in healthy never smokers. The indices of central fatness were waist circumference, hip circumference, thigh circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, waist-to-thigh ratio, body adiposity index, and A body shape index. Whenever possible, we clarified the shape of the dose-response relations. Additionally, we performed a meta-analysis to compare the risk of all cause mortality associated with a one standard deviation increment across different measures of central fatness.

Methods

We used the PRISMA (preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses) statement as guidance for reporting this systematic review.16 We also followed the 12 item PRISMA extension when writing the abstract.17

Search strategy

We combined keywords relevant to general and central obesity, mortality, and study design to find potentially relevant studies (table S1 in appendix 1). We searched PubMed and Scopus databases from inception to July 2019, followed by a hand search of the reference lists of related articles and reviews. We restricted our systematic search to articles published in English.

Eligibility and study selection

Two authors (AJ and MSZ) reviewed the title and abstract of all articles obtained. They selected potentially eligible studies that were conducted in the general population (aged >18 years and older); had a prospective observational design; considered self-reported or measured anthropometric indices as exposure and in at least three quantitative categories; considered all cause mortality as the outcome of interest; reported adjusted effect sizes across categories of exposures; and provided the numbers of participants or person years and events across categories of exposures. All cause mortality was defined as death by any cause, including non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease, site specific cancers, type 2 diabetes, and respiratory disease, communicable and infectious diseases, and any other cause of death.

We also included studies that reported continuous estimation of the associations. For duplicate publications, those with the largest number of participants were included. However, when different publications from the same study reported effect sizes as categorical and continuous, the study with the categorical model was selected for inclusion in both linear and non-linear dose-response analyses. Some study publications reported effect sizes as categorical but the exact amount of the standard deviation was not reported in the text, while other publications from the same study reported the direct effect size for a one standard deviation increment in anthropometric measures. For these studies, the publication with the categorical model was included in dose-response analyses and another publication that reported the direct effect size for a one standard deviation increment was included in the standard deviation analysis. We excluded retrospective studies, studies in populations with diseases, studies of older people living in institutions, and studies with populations aged 85 years and older.

Data extraction and assessment for study quality

One author (MSZ) extracted data from each primary prospective cohort study by using prespecified data extraction forms. The first author (AJ) checked the data extracted from each study to ensure that all data were extracted correctly. The information extracted from eligible studies was the first author’s name, publication year, study name, location, age range or mean age (years), sex, number of participants, follow-up duration, anthropometric assessment method, and confounding factors in the multivariable analysis. All meta-analyses were conducted by using the maximally adjusted effect sizes reported in primary studies. However, for studies that controlled for intermediate variables, such as blood pressure or hypertension, lipid profile, and diabetes in their maximally adjusted model, the alternative model without these intermediate variables was selected and included in the meta-analyses.115 If the alternative model was age adjusted only, the multivariable model covering intermediate variables was selected. When studies reported effect sizes with and without controlling for body mass index, we included the model with adjustment for body mass index in the main analyses. However, we performed subgroup analyses on the basis of adjustment for body mass index. When studies had insufficient data, we contacted the authors twice, with a two week interval, but only one study author provided the requested data. We used the Newcastle-Ottawa scale to assess the quality of the studies included in the meta-analyses.18 Any discrepancies were resolved through discussion to reach consensus.

Data synthesis and statistical analysis

We performed random effects meta-analyses19 to calculate summary hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for a 10 cm (3.94 inch) increment in waist circumference and hip circumference; a 5 cm (1.97 inch) increase in thigh circumference; a 0.1 unit increment in waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-thigh ratio, and waist-to-height ratio; a 10% increment in body adiposity index; and a 0.005 unit increment in A body shape index. The reported relative risks were considered equal to hazard ratios.20 We used the generalised least squares trend estimation method, introduced by Greenland and colleagues,2122 to measure the linear dose-response relations. This method needs distribution of events and participants or person years and adjusted risk estimates across categories of anthropometric measures. The median point in each category was assigned to the corresponding hazard ratio. When studies did not report the direct median of each category, we estimated approximate medians by using the midpoint of the lower and upper bounds. We assumed that open ended categories had the same interval as the adjunct category. For studies that did not report the numbers of participants or person years in each category, we estimated these values by dividing the total number of participants or person years by the number of categories if the exposures were defined as quantiles.2324 When studies reported separate effect sizes across sex or other subgroups, we pooled the subgroup specific estimates by using a fixed effects model and used the pooled effect size for meta-analysis. For studies that did not consider the lowest category as the reference, we excluded the categories below the reference category to measure the linear dose-response relations.1

Two studies reported continuous estimation of the associations, but the hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals across categories of exposures were shown in figures only. Therefore, we estimated hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals by using a web plot digitiser.25 We tested the accuracy of the results by calculating hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for a one standard deviation increment in exposures. We used data obtained by software and compared them with the direct continuous estimation reported in the text, which indicated close results (hazard ratio 1.22 obtained by estimation compared with 1.24 reported in the text). We evaluated the potential influence of each study on the summary hazard ratios by re-estimating the hazard ratios after excluding one study at a time. We performed subgroup analyses by sex, geographical location, anthropometric assessment method, follow-up duration, number of participants, study quality, adjustment for main confounders (physical activity, smoking, body mass index, and alcohol intake) and intermediates (blood pressure, serum cholesterol, and type 2 diabetes). We controlled for smoking status and pre-existing diseases by performing additional sensitivity analyses. Analyses were restricted to never smokers, healthy participants, and healthy never smokers, whenever possible. Analyses of healthy participants included studies that excluded participants with a history of cancer and cardiovascular disease at baseline. We evaluated between study heterogeneity by using the I2 statistic and Cochran’s Q test of heterogeneity.26 Publication bias was assessed with Egger’s asymmetry test27 and Begg’s test28 if sufficient studies existed (n≥10).29

We also tested for a non-linear dose-response association. We modelled the exposures by using restricted cubic splines with three knots according to Harrell’s recommended percentiles (10%, 50%, and 90%)30 of the distribution. The correlation within each category of published hazard ratios was taken into account and the study specific estimates were combined by using a one stage linear mixed effects meta-analysis.31 This method estimates the study specific slope lines and combines them to obtain an overall average slope3233 in a single stage, and is a more precise, flexible, and efficient method than the traditional two stage method.31

Some studies did not consider the lowest category as the reference, therefore we recalculated effect sizes by assuming the lowest category as the reference34; all categories of exposure in the non-linear dose-response meta-analyses were included and the associations across the entire exposure ranges were modelled.1 Similar to the linear trend estimation, we performed sensitivity analyses by restricting the analyses to never smokers, healthy never smokers, and to studies that controlled for body mass index in their multivariable analyses. Additionally, we performed separate non-linear dose-response analyses on the basis of follow-up duration to better control for pre-existing diseases. Participants with pre-existing diseases are more likely to experience death in the early years of follow-up, and so the proportion of deaths caused by pre-existing diseases, and the confounding effects of pre-existing diseases, decline with the increase in follow-up duration. Therefore, studies with long term follow-up durations might present a more accurate estimation of the associations.

We compared the associations across different measures of central obesity by conducting an additional analysis to quantify the associations for a one standard deviation increment in anthropometric measures. We estimated hazard ratios for a one standard deviation increment in measures in each study, and then pooled hazard ratios by using a random effects model. When studies reported direct effect sizes for a one standard deviation increment in exposures, we included the hazard ratios in the meta-analysis as reported. For studies that reported the hazard ratio per specific amount of increase in anthropometric measures, we exponentiated the log (hazard ratio) times the study specific standard deviation of the anthropometric measure to obtain the hazard ratio for an increment of one standard deviation in the level of the anthropometric measures. When studies grouped the exposure in quantiles, we estimated the hazard ratios for a one standard deviation increment by using the methods developed by Greenland and colleagues.21 All analyses were conducted with Stata software, version 15 (Stata Corp, College Station, TX).

Patient and public involvement

No patients were involved in setting the research question or the outcome measures, nor were they involved in developing plans for design, or implementation of the study. No patients were asked to advise on interpretation or writing up of results. There was a meta-analysis skill level that could not be easily learned by a member of the public with basic research training.

Results

We found 110 199 publications through database searching plus four publications through hand searching, of which 11 458 records were duplicates. We reviewed titles and abstracts of all remaining publications and another 96 795 publications were excluded, yielding 1950 studies for full text assessment (fig S1 in appendix 1). Of these studies, 70 publications provided sufficient information for the meta-analysis. Two publications reported the results of the two separate cohort studies and were regarded as two separate studies.3536 Ultimately, 72 prospective cohort studies with 2 528 297 participants and 150 164 events were included in final analyses.3536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104 Thirty studies were from Europe, 22 studies were from the United States, 16 studies were from Asia, two studies were from Canada, one from Brazil, and one from Tobago in South America. Twelve studies included only men, 12 studies included only women, and another 48 studies included both sexes. Follow-up durations were between 3 and 24 years. Seven studies used self-reported anthropometric measures and 65 studies measured anthropometric indices.

Three different publications from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were included in the analyses of waist-to-height ratio,59 thigh circumference,102 and waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, and waist-to-thigh ratio.86 Another publication from this study that reported direct estimations for one standard deviation increment in anthropometric measures was included in the analyses of standard deviations.63 Four different publications from the Danish MONICA study were included in the analyses of hip circumference (women only),71 hip circumference (men only),57 thigh circumference,56 and waist circumference.66 Two separate publications from the Danish diet, cancer and health study were included in the analyses of waist circumference41 and hip circumference.42 Fifty studies were included in the analysis of waist circumference, nine studies in the analysis of hip circumference, and three in the analysis of thigh circumference; 31, 11, 2, 4, and 9 studies were included in the analyses of waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, waist-to-thigh ratio, body adiposity index, and A body shape index, respectively.

We summarise general characteristics of the studies included in the present meta-analysis in table S2 (appendix 1). Table S3 (appendix 1) presents the reported effect sizes across categories of each exposure in the primary studies, and table S4 gives the qualities of studies assessed by the Newcastle-Ottawa scale.

Waist circumference

The systematic search identified 50 eligible cohort studies with 128 842 all cause mortality events among 2 056 428 participants for the relation of waist circumference and the risk of all cause mortality.37383940414344464748495051525354586061626566676873747778808182838485868788899091929394959697100101103104 The pooled analysis indicated that each 10 cm (3.94 inch) increment in waist circumference was associated with an 11% higher risk of all cause mortality: hazard ratio 1.11 (95% confidence interval 1.08 to 1.13), with high heterogeneity (I2=88%, Pheterogeneity<0.001; fig 1, table 1). The summary hazard ratio remained unchanged when each study was sequentially removed from the main analysis. The hazard ratios were 1.08 (1.04 to 1.13; I2=87%, n=27) and 1.12 (1.09 to 1.16, I2=85%, n=30) in men and women, respectively.

Fig 1
Fig 1

Summary hazard ratio of all cause mortality for a 10 cm increment in waist circumference

Table 1

Subgroup analyses of waist circumference (10 cm increase) and risk of all cause mortality

View this table:

In the subgroup analyses, a trend was found towards a higher risk with increasing follow-up duration and number of events (table 1). The association was significant when we controlled for smoking status, physical activity, and alcohol consumption, and strengthened when we controlled for body mass index: hazard ratio 1.17 (1.13 to 1.22, I2=86%, n=15). The association was not significant in participants older than 60 years: hazard ratio 1.03 (0.98 to 1.08, I2=81%, n=14). Follow-up duration, study quality, and adjustment for smoking could be sources of heterogeneity. No evidence was found of publication bias with Egger’s test (P=1.00) and Begg’s test (P=0.58; fig S2 in appendix 1).

Fourteen studies with 45 783 events among 731 954 healthy participants28384052616265666782839097103 reported sufficient data for the analyses of healthy participants. Eight studies with 27 377 events among 285 874 never smokers39435167929799103 and five studies with 26 210 events among 276 409 healthy never smokers43679297103 also reported sufficient data for the analyses of never smokers and healthy never smokers, respectively. Changes were weak in comparison to the main analysis, expect for men in whom the associations became non-significant in never smokers and healthy never smokers (table 1).

Thirty two studies reported sufficient data for the non-linear dose-response analyses.373840434748495253545860616667687374818283848687889192969799100103 The analysis of women indicated a J shaped association. The risk of all cause mortality did not change for a waist circumference of 60-80 cm (hazard ratio80cm 1.01, 95% confidence interval 0.99 to 1.03) and then increased sharply and linearly (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=23; fig 2). The results for healthy women (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=10), studies that controlled for body mass index (Pnon-linearity=0.002, n=7), studies with more than 10 years of follow-up (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=10), women who were never smokers (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=6), and healthy women who were never smokers (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=5) are presented in figure 2. The results for men are presented in figure 3. The analysis of men indicated a J shaped relation with the risk of all cause mortality, which was lowest at a waist circumference of 90 cm (hazard ratio90cm 0.96, 95% confidence interval 0.94 to 0.98), and then increased sharply and linearly (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=16; fig 3).

Fig 2
Fig 2

Dose-response association of waist circumference with risk of all cause mortality in women. Solid line represents non-linear dose response and dotted lines represent 95% confidence interval. Circles represent hazard ratio point estimates for adiposity categories from each study with circle size proportional to inverse of standard error. Small vertical black lines represent baseline adiposity category for each separate study

Fig 3
Fig 3

Dose-response association of waist circumference with risk of all cause mortality in men. Solid line represents non-linear dose response and dotted lines represent 95% confidence interval. Circles represent hazard ratio point estimates for adiposity categories from each study with circle size proportional to inverse of standard error. Small vertical black lines represent baseline adiposity category for each separate study

Waist-to-hip ratio

Thirty one cohort studies (30 publications) with 1 112 816 participants and 75 183 all cause mortality events were considered eligible for the analysis of waist-to-hip ratio and the risk of all cause mortality.353845474850525864657072747578828384868789919294959798100101103 Every 0.1 unit increment in waist-to-hip ratio was associated with a 20% higher risk: hazard ratio 1.20 (95% confidence interval 1.15 to 1.25, I2=90%, n=31; fig 4). The hazard ratio did not change when we excluded each study one at a time. The association was stronger in women than in men (1.121 v 1.16), and became stronger with increasing follow-up duration and number of events (table 2). A significant association remained stable among studies that adjusted for physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, and body mass index. The association became weaker in participants older than 60 years: hazard ratio 1.09 (1.01 to 1.17, I2=76%, n=8). The subgroup analyses suggested that follow-up duration, number of events, study quality, and anthropometric assessment method were potential sources of between study heterogeneity. No evidence of publication bias was observed with Egger’s test (P=0.19) and Begg’s test (P=0.52; fig S3 in appendix 1).

Fig 4
Fig 4

Summary hazard ratio of all cause mortality for 0.1 unit increment in waist-to-hip ratio. SMHS=Shanghai men’s health study; SWHS=Shanghai women’s health study

Table 2

Subgroup analyses of waist-to-hip ratio (0.1 unit increase) and risk of all cause mortality

View this table:

Nine cohort studies with 516 998 healthy participants and 26 285 events3845526572828397103 reported sufficient data for the analyses of healthy participants. Eight studies (seven publications) with 17 107 events among 304 443 never smokers354565929799103 and three studies with 11 535 events among 203 758 healthy never smokers4597103 also reported sufficient data for the analyses of never smokers and healthy never smokers, respectively. The associations remained unchanged in healthy participants, but attenuated weakly in never smokers (table 2).

Twenty two cohort studies (21 publications) reported sufficient data for the non-linear dose-response meta-analyses.35454748525864707482838486879192979899100103Figure 5 presents the results for all participants (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=22), all participants after body mass index was accounted for (Pnon-linearity=0.06, n=7), healthy participants (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=6), and never smokers (Pnon-linearity=0.42, n=5). Overall the relations were monotonic with little evidence of sharp changes at particular cut-off points (fig 5). Additionally, we performed separate analyses for men (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=15) and women (Pnon-linearity=0.41, n=18), which showed similar monotonic relations.

Fig 5
Fig 5

Dose-response association of waist-to-hip ratio with risk of all cause mortality. Solid line represents non-linear dose response and dotted lines represent 95% confidence interval. Circles represent hazard ratio point estimates for adiposity categories from each study with circle size proportional to inverse of standard error. Small vertical black lines represent baseline adiposity category for each separate study

Waist-to-height ratio

Eleven studies with 760 190 participants and 23 959 events of all cause mortality were included in the analysis of waist-to-height ratio.50596065818287899091101 The summary hazard ratio for a 0.1 unit increment in waist-to-height ratio was 1.24 (95% confidence interval 1.12 to 1.36, I2=94%; fig 6, table 3). Exclusion of each study one at a time did not materially alter the results (hazard ratio range 1.21-1.27). The hazard ratios were 1.13 (1.01 to 1.24, I2=77%, n=8), 1.20 (1.07 to 1.32, I2=89%, n=8), and 1.18 (1.03 to 1.34, I2=88%, n=4) in men, women, and healthy participants, respectively.65829091 The hazard ratio was 1.42 (1.16 to 1.69, I2=69%, n=2) in studies that controlled for body mass index. Table S5 (appendix 1) presents the results for subgroup analyses. Adjustment for body mass index, alcohol intake, and geographical region were potential sources of heterogeneity. Publication bias tests showed some evidence of bias with Egger’s test (P=0.05) and Begg’s test (P=0.08; fig S4 in appendix 1).

Fig 6
Fig 6

Summary hazard ratio of all cause mortality for 0.1 unit increment in waist-to-height ratio

Table 3

Summary hazard ratios of all cause mortality in relation to central obesity measures

View this table:

Five studies were eligible for the non-linear dose-response analysis.6081828791 The analyses showed significant dose dependent relations between waist-to-height ratio and mortality risk in the analyses of all participants (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=5) and healthy participants (Pnon-linearity=0.005, n=2 studies with sex specific effect sizes; fig 7). Both men (Pnon-linearity=0.05, n=3) and women (Pnon-linearity=0.001, n=3) showed a similar J shaped non-linear response (fig 7). The all cause mortality risk was lowest at 0.50 (men: hazard ratio0.50unit 0.96, 0.94 to 0.98; women: hazard ratio0.50unit 0.90, 0.78 to 1.05), after which a sharp linear increase was observed.

Fig 7
Fig 7

Dose-response association of waist-to-height ratio with risk of all-cause mortality. Solid line represents non-linear dose response and dotted lines represent 95% confidence interval. Circles represent hazard ratio point estimates for adiposity categories from each study with circle size proportional to inverse of standard error. Small vertical black lines represent baseline adiposity category for each separate study

Waist-to-thigh ratio

Two cohort studies comprising 2684 events among 22 866 participants reported risk estimates of all cause mortality in relation to waist-to-thigh ratio.7886 The hazard ratios associated with a 0.1 unit increment in waist-to-thigh ratio were 1.21 (95% confidence interval 1.03 to 1.39, I2=97%; table 3), 1.19 (0.98 to 1.41, I2=96%), and 1.15 (1.07 to 1.22, I2=0%) in all participants, men, and women, respectively (fig S5 in appendix 1). We were unable to perform a non-linear dose-response analysis because only two studies were available for the analysis.

Body adiposity index

Four cohort studies involving 13 787 events of total mortality among 124 911 participants were included in the analysis of body adiposity index.65808797 Summary hazard ratio for a 10% increment in body adiposity index was 1.17 (95% confidence interval 1.00 to 1.33), with high heterogeneity (I2=75%, Pheterogeneity=0.007; fig 8, table 3). The results for men and women were 1.27 (1.04 to 1.50, I2=48%, n=2) and 1.03 (1.00 to 1.05; I2=91%, n=2), respectively. The non-linear dose-response analysis suggested a U shaped association between body adiposity index and all cause mortality risk (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=4; fig 9) with the lowest risk at a body adiposity index of 30% (hazard ratio 0.89, 0.84 to 0.95).

Fig 8
Fig 8

Summary hazard ratio of all cause mortality for 10% increment in body adiposity index

Fig 9
Fig 9

Dose-response association of body adiposity index with the risk of all cause mortality (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=4). Solid line represents the non-linear dose response and dotted lines represent 95% confidence interval. Circles represent the hazard ratio point estimates for adiposity categories from each study with circle size proportional to inverse of standard error. Small vertical black lines represent baseline adiposity category for each separate study

A body shape index

Nine cohort studies with 25 603 events among 716 596 participants were included in the analysis of A body shape index.505355686981899097 A 0.005 unit increment in A body shape index was associated with a 15% greater risk: hazard ratio 1.15 (95% confidence interval 1.10 to 1.20, I2=87%, Pheterogeneity<0.001; fig 10, table 3). Summary hazard ratios were 1.22 (1.12 to 1.32, I2=35%, n=3), 1.12 (1.09 to 1.15, I2=0%, n=2), 1.17 (1.01 to 1.33; I2=83%, n=5), and 1.11 (1.06 to 1.16, I2=74%, n=5) in studies that controlled for body mass index, healthy participants, men, and women, respectively. Geographical region, adjustment for body mass index, and exclusion of participants with pre-existing diseases were potential sources of heterogeneity.

Fig 10
Fig 10

Summary hazard ratio of all cause mortality for 0.005 unit increment in A body shape index

Six studies reported data for the non-linear dose-response analysis.556869819097 A positive monotonic association was found between A body shape index and the risk of all cause mortality (Pnon-linearity<0.001, fig 11).

Fig 11
Fig 11

Dose-response association of A body shape index with risk of all cause mortality (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=6). Solid line represents non-linear dose response and dotted lines represent 95% confidence interval. Circles represent the hazard ratio point estimates for adiposity categories from each study with circle size proportional to inverse of standard error. Small vertical black lines represent baseline adiposity category for each separate study

Thigh circumference

Three cohort studies involving 25 412 participants and 4468 events were included in the analysis of thigh circumference.5678102 We observed an 18% lower risk of total mortality associated with a 5 cm (1.97 inch) increase in thigh circumference in the analysis of all participants: hazard ratio 0.82 (95% confidence interval 0.75 to 0.89, I2=54%, Pheterogeneity=0.11; table 3). The hazard ratios were 0.82 (0.73 to 0.90, I2=0%, n=2) and 0.84 (0.63 to 1.06, I2=80%, n=2) in men and women, respectively (fig S6 in appendix 1).

Hip circumference

Nine cohort studies with 25 618 cases among 297 598 participants were eligible for the analysis of hip circumference.3842577176788297103 A 10 cm (3.94 inch) increment in hip circumference was associated with a 10% lower risk: hazard ratio 0.90 (95% confidence interval 0.81 to 0.99), with high heterogeneity (I2=95%, Pheterogeneity<0.001; fig 12, table 3). The association was significant in women (0.90, 0.81 to 99, I2=93%, n=7), but not in men (0.92, 0.73 to 1.10, I2=94%, n=5). In an analysis stratified based on adjustment for body mass index and waist circumference, the association became stronger when body mass index and waist circumference were accounted for (0.78, 0.66 to 0.90, I2=87%, n=4). In contrast, a significant positive association was found in studies without control for body mass index and waist circumference (1.04, 1.02 to 1.06, I2=0%, n=5). Because the direction of the association depended completely on adjustment for body mass index and waist circumference, we did not perform subgroup analyses based on other variables.

Fig 12
Fig 12

Summary hazard ratio of all cause mortality for 10 cm increment in hip circumference

Seven studies reported data for the non-linear dose-response analyses.385771768297103 One study reported separate effect sizes with and without control for body mass index.103 The risk of all cause mortality decreased linearly to hip circumference of 100 cm among studies that controlled for waist circumference and body mass index (hazard ratio100cm 0.70, 95% confidence interval 0.64 to 0.77) and then reached a plateau (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=4; fig 13, upper panel). In contrast, a U shaped association was observed in the analysis of four studies that did not control for body mass index and waist circumference (Pnon-linearity<0.001, n=4; fig 13, lower panel), with lowest risk at 103 cm (hazard ratio103cm 0.86, 0.83 to 0.89).

Fig 13
Fig 13

Dose-response association of hip circumference with risk of all cause mortality. Solid line represents non-linear dose response and dotted lines represent 95% confidence interval. Circles represent hazard ratio point estimates for adiposity categories from each study with circle size proportional to inverse of standard error. Small vertical black lines represent baseline adiposity category for each separate study

Comparison of associations across different measures of central fatness

To compare the associations of indices of central fatness with all cause mortality risk, we calculated hazard ratio in each study for a one standard deviation increment in anthropometric measures and pooled the results with the use of a random effects model. However, in that analysis, the number of studies might differ with the number of studies included in the main analyses because we were unable to calculate standard deviation values in some studies. Some studies reported hazard ratios for one standard deviation, but the exact amount of standard deviation was not reported in the text. Two studies (one publication) reported effect size for a one standard deviation increment in waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, and hip circumference, but the exact standard deviations were not reported in the text, and so were included only in the analyses of standard deviation.36 Another two cohort studies reported effect size for a one standard deviation increment in waist-to-height ratio, and again, did not report exact standard deviation values6069; therefore, these studies were included only in the standard deviation analysis. Table 4 and figs S7-S14 (appendix 1) present summary hazard ratios for one standard deviation increments in anthropometric measures.

Table 4

Summary hazard ratios of all cause mortality for one standard deviation increment in central obesity measures

View this table:

Discussion

Principal findings

In this systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis, we pooled data from 72 prospective cohort studies to present a relatively comprehensive overview of the association of indices of central fatness with all cause mortality risk. We found that most indices of abdominal adiposity including waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, waist-to-thigh ratio, and A body shape index were significantly and positively associated with a higher all cause mortality risk. We found that the associations remained significant after body mass index was accounted for, which indicated that abdominal deposition of fat, independent of overall obesity, is associated with a higher risk. We performed sex specific non-linear dose-response analyses that showed the risk of total mortality did not materially change within the initial units of central fatness; this was followed by a sharp and significant increase in the risk. However, this study showed that two indices of central fatness—thigh circumference and hip circumference—were inversely associated with all cause mortality risk.

Mechanisms

We know that adiposity is associated with a higher risk of premature death. Adiposity exerts adverse impacts on systemic inflammation,105 oxidative stress,106 insulin resistance,107 blood pressure,108 lipid profile,109 and endothelial dysfunction110 and is linked to a greater risk of cardiovascular disease,111 site specific cancers,112 kidney disease,113 and neurological disorders.114 The number of people with overweight and obesity has doubled during the past 40 years. As a result, approximately one third of the world’s populations are overweight or obese.115

Body mass index, a measure of overall adiposity, is easy to obtain and has clear categories. Therefore, body mass index is the most frequent anthropometric measure used to define and classify adiposity. However, because of the relative inability of body mass index to distinguish between lean mass and fat mass, and to differentiate between overall adiposity and abdominal adiposity, indices of central fatness might be more reliable indicators of adiposity. Body mass index might be increased because of muscle development rather than fat accumulation from overeating.116 Higher muscle mass could reduce the risk of premature death.117 However, although higher body mass index is associated with a higher risk of morbidity and mortality, substantial heterogeneity was found among people with similar body mass index values. Studies have shown that among people who were categorised into equal body mass index categories, those with abdominal adiposity (reflected by large waist circumference) had an increased risk of coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes.118119 Abdominal adiposity, reflected mainly by large waist circumference, is highly correlated with detrimental visceral fat120121 and is a reflection of visceral fat deposition.122 Having a larger waist circumference, even within the normal weight range, is associated with cardiometabolic abnormalities123 and higher risk of mortality and morbidity.61124125

Although waist circumference shows the regional fat distribution, it is strongly correlated with body mass index.126 The waist-to-hip ratio might provide better information on regional fat distribution because it considers detrimental visceral fat and beneficial gluteal fat and muscle.6 The waist-to-hip ratio is less strongly correlated with body mass index than waist circumference and has less potential for collinearity; therefore, it could be a more specific surrogate for regional body fat distribution. Larger waist circumference indicates higher detrimental visceral fat mass, while greater waist-to-hip ratio indicates higher detrimental visceral fat mass and lower beneficial gluteofemoral fat and muscle mass. The non-linear dose-response analyses indicated that the slope of the curvilinear associations was steeper in the analyses of waist-to-hip ratio compared with waist circumference, especially in the subgroup of studies that controlled for body mass index. However, height is easier to measure than hip circumference, and so waist-to-height ratio could be used as an appropriate alternative to waist-to-hip ratio because it controls for body size by using height. Waist-to-height ratio could have greater correlation with cardiometabolic risk factors than body mass index.5

Considering the limitations of the current measures of general and abdominal adiposity, including body mass index (inability to distinguish lean mass from fat mass), waist circumference (strong correlation with body mass index), and waist-to-hip ratio (difficulty in measuring hip circumference), a new anthropometric measure entitled A body shape index has been developed.68 This measure is calculated by dividing waist circumference by (body mass index2/3×height1/2). The A body shape index has a slight correlation with body mass index, height, and weight, and so could be independent of other anthropometric variables in predicting mortality.127 In the present review, we found a positive monotonic association between A body shape index and the risk of all cause mortality; the risk of premature death increased proportionally with increasing A body shape index values. The results are similar to those of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which indicated a positive linear association between A body shape index and risk of premature death.68

Comparison with other studies

For each 10 cm increase in waist circumference, we found an 8% and a 12% higher risk of all cause mortality in men and women, respectively. The results were relatively weaker than those of a recent pooled analysis of 11 prospective cohort studies in Western countries, which suggested a 7% and a 9% higher risk for a 5 cm increase in waist circumference in men and women, respectively (equivalent to a 14% and an 18% higher risk for a 10 cm increase, respectively).15 The weaker associations found in our study might be owing to the inclusion of large scale Western prospective cohort studies only in the previous pooled analysis. We included 15 non-Western cohort studies, which reported weaker associations.

We also found a relatively J shaped association between waist circumference and all cause mortality risk in the analyses of men. The lowest risk was observed for a waist circumference of 90 cm in the analyses of all participants, healthy participants, and especially in studies with more than 10 years of follow-up. When we limited the analysis of men to studies that controlled for body mass index, the risk did not change up to a waist circumference of 100 cm, and then increased sharply and linearly. Only four studies were available for the analysis of men who were never smokers, and the results showed no significant association. For women, we found a cut-off point of 80 cm in all women, healthy women, women who were never smokers, and healthy women who were never smokers.

Previous studies analysing the shape of the association between waist circumference and total mortality risk have inconsistent results. Some large scale prospective cohort studies showed a J shaped relation,435152616783 while others suggested a positive linear association.103 A pooled analysis of 650 000 adults in Western countries found a J shaped association for men and a positive linear association for women.15 The present study found cut-off points of 80 for women and 90 for men, after which the risk of mortality showed a sharp and linear increment in the risk. However, owing to the inclusion of smokers and participants with pre-existing disease, the results for all participants must be interpreted cautiously. Additionally, the analysis of aggregate data will lead to underestimation of relations, and we had to use several approximations that will have affected the analyses. Therefore, the shape of the curves obtained in this review must be interpreted with caution.

Current guidelines recommend different criteria to define people with abdominal adiposity and high cardiometabolic risk. The executive summary of the third report of the National Cholesterol Education Programme expert panel on detection, evaluation, and treatment of high blood cholesterol in adults (Adult Treatment Panel III) recommends cut-off points of waist circumference greater than 102 cm for men and greater than 88 cm for women to define abdominal adiposity in the US.128 According to the definition of the International Diabetes Federation, central adiposity is defined as a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in European countries and at least 90 cm in Asian and African countries for men, and at least 80 cm in European, Asian, and African countries for women.129 The European Group for the Study of Insulin Resistance considerers a waist circumference larger than 94 and 80 cm defines abdominal adiposity in men and women, respectively.130 However, unlike the other three definitions, the World Health Organization defined central adiposity as a waist-to-hip ratio greater than 0.90 in men and greater than 0.85 in women.131

For waist-to-height ratio, the existing literature suggests a cut-off point of 0.50 for determining abdominal adiposity and cardiometabolic risk.5132133134135 In support of current evidence, we found a cut-off point of 0.50 for men and women, after which the risk of all cause mortality increased sharply and linearly; the risk increased significantly at a waist-to-height ratio of 0.55. In the analyses of waist-to-hip ratio, a positive monotonic association was found in men and women, in which the risk increased from baseline up to a waist-to-hip ratio of 1.1.

In the analyses of waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, and A body shape index, the results were much stronger in the subgroups of studies that controlled for body mass index in their multivariable analyses than in subgroups that did not control for body mass index. Of the 72 prospective cohort studies in the present review, 13 reported hazard ratios with and without adjustment for body mass index; of these, 11 studies (10 publications) reported stronger effect sizes in the models that controlled for body mass index.353941546061628183103 Only two cohort studies reported weaker effect sizes in the models without adjustment for body mass index.4367 Adjustment for body mass index could decrease potential confounding by pre-existing disease and pathological conditions, which in turn are associated with lower lean body mass.136 Another explanation is that body mass index reflects both fat and lean mass, while waist circumference and other indices of central adiposity mainly reflect fat mass. After adjusting for body mass index, waist circumference mainly reflects total and deleterious visceral fat, and as a result, shows stronger association with mortality risk. Therefore, by combining central adiposity measures with body mass index, a more accurate estimation could be made of the association of adiposity with mortality risk.

In the non-linear dose-response meta-analyses of waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio, the slope of the curvilinear association increased sharply after adjustment for body mass index. A large prospective cohort study in Europe suggested a J shaped association between waist circumference and risk of death before adjustment for body mass index. Additionally, a strong positive linear association was observed after adjustment for body mass index, suggesting that both measures of general and abdominal adiposity should be considered when determining the risk of premature death.83 Although in the present review 13 prospective cohort studies reported the hazard ratios with and without adjustment for body mass index, different primary studies were still included in the subgroups with and without controlling for body mass index. Therefore, the observed differences in the analyses with and without controlling for body mass index could be subject to confounding.

We also found a significant inverse association between larger hip circumference and thigh circumference and the risk of mortality. Deposition of fat in gluteofemoral region, irrespective of gender, is thought to be independently associated with better lipid and glucose profiles, and might have protective effects against cardiovascular and metabolic risk.6 However, we found that the direction of the association between hip circumference and mortality was different among studies with and without controlling for waist circumference and body mass index. An inverse association was found among studies that controlled for waist circumference and body mass index, and in contrast, a U shaped association was observed among studies that did not control for waist circumference and body mass index.

Hip circumference measures gluteal subcutaneous adipose tissue and muscle mass.6 In contrast, waist circumference is a reflection of subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue. However, hip circumference is highly correlated with body mass index and a correlation exists between body mass index and waist circumference.12 Therefore, larger hip circumference might reflect higher body mass index and waist circumference, which could partly explain the U shaped association found in studies that did not control for waist circumference.38 Adjusting hip circumference, which reflects beneficial gluteal fat, for waist circumference, which incorporates deleterious visceral fat, might allow a more precise estimation of the beneficial effects of gluteofemoral fat.137 However, different prospective cohort studies were included in the subgroups with and without controlling for waist circumference and body mass index. Only one prospective cohort study reported the hazard ratios of all cause mortality for hip circumference with and without controlling for waist circumference and body mass index.103 These results are from different studies and therefore could be subject to confounding.

Two recent comprehensive meta-analyses of more than 200 prospective cohort studies were performed to evaluate the association between overall adiposity, reflected by body mass index, and the risk of all cause mortality.12 Both low and high body mass index were found to be associated with a significantly higher risk. The results indicated a U shaped and a J shaped association between body mass index and the risk of all cause mortality in the general population and healthy never smokers, respectively. However, we found inconsistent results. Our findings indicated a modest increase in the risk of all cause mortality in participants with small waist circumference in men, and in women who were never smokers and healthy women who were never smokers. The higher risk of mortality in underweight participants by body mass index has been attributed to reverse causation and potential confounding by smoking, recent weight loss, and pre-existing disease, which might result in a low body mass index.138139

The body mass index incorporates both lean mass and fat mass, and so being underweight by body mass index reflects lower beneficial lean mass and detrimental visceral fat mass. In contrast, abdominal adiposity is a measure of subcutaneous and visceral fat mass, therefore smaller waist circumference might reflect lower detrimental visceral fat mass and does not necessarily reflect lower lean body mass. This information could partly explain the observed difference in the risk of mortality in participants with low body mass index and small waist circumference. Another explanation is that although a strong correlation exists between body mass index and waist circumference, small waist circumference does not necessarily reflect low body mass index. Participants could be normal weight, overweight, or obese by body mass index, and at the same time, have either small or large waist circumference. A prospective evaluation among 150 000 women who were postmenopausal in the US indicated that participants could be normal weight, overweight, or even obese by body mass index, but could have small waist circumference.140 Therefore, smaller waist circumference does not necessarily reflect lower body mass index and so is not necessarily associated with a higher mortality risk.

We also performed an additional analysis to compare the associations across different measures of central fatness. The results showed that waist-to-thigh ratio and A body shape index have the strongest associations with mortality risk among anthropometric measures studied in this review. However, some important differences exist, such as the number of primary studies included in the analysis of each anthropometric measure (eg, 51 studies for waist circumference and two studies for waist-to-thigh ratio), and confounding variables were accounted for in each analysis. Additionally, these results reflect the associations in the general populations. Smoking status and pre-existing disease might confound the association of indices of central obesity with all cause mortality risk. Therefore, our findings relating to the stronger association of waist-to-thigh ratio and A body shape index with all cause mortality risk should be interpreted cautiously.

Strengths and limitations of this study

Some important limitations must be noted when interpreting the results. Although we excluded studies specifically conducted among patients with diseases, some original studies still included patients with existing diseases and potentially undiagnosed diseases at baseline. Therefore, potential confounding by pre-existing diseases must be considered. Furthermore, in the analyses of waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio, only eight studies reported sufficient data for never smokers. Additionally, we were unable to perform such analyses for waist-to-height ratio, waist-to-thigh ratio, thigh circumference, hip circumference, body adiposity index, and A body shape index. Therefore, the results might have been affected by confounding effects of smoking. However, for waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio, the results for never smokers were approximately similar to those of the main analyses. We performed sex specific non-linear dose-response analyses of never smokers and healthy participants only in the analysis of waist circumference, and we were unable to perform such analyses for other anthropometric measures.

Only 14 studies for waist circumference, nine studies for waist-to-hip ratio, four studies for waist-to-height ratio, and two studies for A body shape index reported data for healthy participants; no study was found to test the associations for waist-to-thigh ratio, hip circumference, thigh circumference, and body adiposity index in healthy participants. Additionally, most of these studies excluded only participants with a history of cancer and cardiovascular disease at baseline. Therefore, residual confounding from undiagnosed pre-existing disease such as respiratory disease and kidney failure must be noted. Furthermore, only two, three, and four studies were available for the analyses of waist-to-thigh ratio, thigh circumference, and body adiposity index, respectively. Additionally, the non-linear dose-response analyses of waist-to-height ratio, body adiposity index, and A body shape index are based on relatively few studies. Therefore, further studies should assess the degree and the shape of the associations for these measures. Almost all studies included in the present review assessed baseline anthropometric measures and potential changes during the follow-up period were not considered in their analyses. Furthermore, existing evidence suggests that the strength of the association between adiposity and the risk of mortality decreases with increasing age.141142 Our results also indicated that the association became non-significant (for waist circumference) or weakened substantially (for waist-to-hip ratio) in participants aged 60 years and older. However, we were unable to test the associations in different subgroups of age for different measures of central fatness, and so future research should test the degree and the shape of the association for different measures of central fatness.

Although indices of central fatness can reflect body fat distribution, they have low capability to measure total body fat,136 and so they can be used as supplementary approaches, in parallel with body mass index, to determine cardiometabolic risk. Finally, analysis of aggregate data would have led to underestimation of relations, and we had to use several approximations that would have affected the analyses. Therefore, some subtle issues such as identification of thresholds and the exact shape of the curves cannot be reliably observed in such data.

The present study also has several strengths. We gathered all the evidence relating to the association of all measures of central fatness with all cause mortality risk. We included 72 high quality prospective cohort studies with more than 2.53 million participants, which enabled us to test the associations in different subgroups. We performed several subgroup analyses based on study duration, geographical location, number of events, and adjustment for main confounders. We performed sex specific non-linear dose-response analyses for almost all exposures, especially for waist circumference, in which we performed sex specific non-linear analyses in never smokers and healthy participants. We found sex specific cut-off points in the analyses of waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, and waist-to-height ratio that confirmed current recommendations for classification of adults to identify those with abdominal adiposity and cardiometabolic risk. Finally, we compared the associations across different measures of central fatness that showed waist-to-thigh ratio and A body shape index had the strongest associations with all cause mortality risk. However, limited studies were found for waist-to-thigh ratio and A body shape index, therefore we cannot speculate that these indices are the best anthropometric measures to predict premature death.

Conclusions

The present meta-analysis of 72 prospective cohort studies indicated that most indices of central fatness including waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height ratio, body adiposity index, and A body shape index, independent of overall adiposity, were positively and significantly associated with a higher all cause mortality risk. Larger hip circumference and thigh circumference were associated with a lower risk. Our results suggest that measures of central adiposity could be used as a supplementary approach, in combination with body mass index, to determine the risk of premature death. However, analysis of aggregate data would have led to underestimation of relations, and several methodological approximations would have affected the analyses. Therefore, an individual participant data meta-analysis of studies with multiple markers (including body mass index) is needed to assess the shape of these relations and their comparison or incremental value with body mass index. Additionally, more accurate estimations of the associations are needed, especially in healthy never smokers.

What is already known on this topic?

  • Existing evidence suggests that central fatness might be more strongly associated with the risk of mortality than overall obesity, however the results have not been quantitatively gathered

  • Several large scale prospective cohort studies have suggested a positive linear or J shaped association between indices of central fatness with all cause mortality risk

  • Systematic reviews and meta-analyses assessing the dose-response association between indices of central fatness and all cause mortality risk are lacking

What this study adds

  • Central fatness, reflected by large waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, and waist-to-height ratio, independent of overall adiposity, was associated with a higher risk of all cause mortality

  • The results suggest a nearly J shaped association between waist circumference and risk of all cause mortality

  • Larger hip circumference and thigh circumference were associated with a lower risk of all cause mortality

Footnotes

  • Contributors: AJ contributed to the study conception, literature search, data extraction, data analysis, and manuscript drafting. MSZ contributed to the literature search, data extraction, and manuscript drafting. SS contributed to manuscript drafting and approving the final manuscript. TAK contributed to the data analysis and approving the final manuscript. SS-B contributed to the study conception, data analysis, and manuscript drafting. All authors acknowledge full responsibility for the analyses and interpretation of the report. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript. SS-B is the guarantor. The corresponding author attests that all listed authors meet authorship criteria and that no others meeting the criteria have been omitted.

  • Funding: No separate funding was necessary for undertaking this systematic review.

  • Competing interests: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf and declare: no support from any organisation for the submitted work; no financial relationships with any organisations that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous three years; no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work; TAK reports grants from Canadian Institutes of Health Research, grants from International Life Sciences Institute, grants from National Honey Board, personal fees from Calorie Control Council, outside the submitted work.

  • Ethical approval: Not required.

  • Data sharing: No additional data available.

  • The lead author affirms that the manuscript is an honest, accurate, and transparent account of the study being reported; that no important aspects of the study have been omitted; and that any discrepancies from the study as planned (and, if relevant, registered) have been explained.

  • Dissemination to participants and related patient and public communities: We plan to disseminate these findings to participants in our annual newsletter.

  • Provenance and peer review statement: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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References