Nieuwe
manier van bepalen kans op hartproblemen door overgewicht.*
Uit een grootschalig onderzoek onder 27.000 mensen in 52 landen blijkt dat ter voorkoming van hartproblemen niet de BMI (body mass index) doch de verhouding tussen de taillemaat en de heupmaat de belangrijkste factor is. Voor vrouwen moet die verhouding minder dan 0,85 zijn en voor mannen minder dan 0,90.
Obesity
Measure Should Be Redefined To Accurately Assess Heart Attack Risk
Waist-to-hip
ratio, not body mass index (BMI), is the best obesity
measure for assessing a person's risk of heart attack,
concludes a global study published in this week's issue of The Lancet.
If
obesity is redefined using waist-to-hip ratio instead of BMI the proportion of
people at risk of heart attack increases by threefold, calculate the authors.
Previous
research has shown that obesity increases the risk of heart
disease. However, these studies have mainly been done in populations of
European and North American origin. The evidence for other populations is
therefore sparse. In the latest study, Dr. Salim Yusuf, director of the
Population Health Research Institute at McMaster
University and Hamilton Health Sciences, and colleagues aimed to assess whether
other markers for obesity, especially waist-to-hip ratio, would be a stronger
predictor of heart attack than the conventional measure of BMI in different
ethnic populations.
The
investigators looked at BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, waist measure, and hip measure
in more than 27,000 people from 52 countries. Half the participants had
previously had a heart attack and half were age and sex-matched controls (individuals
who had not had a heart attack and were the same age and sex as cases). The team
found that BMI was only slightly higher in heart attack patients than in
controls, with no difference in the Middle East and South Asia. By contrast,
heart attack patients had a strikingly higher waist-to-hip ratio than controls,
irrespective of other cardiovascular risk factors. The researchers found that
this observation was consistent in men and women, across all ages, and in all
regions of the world.
The
authors' state that compared with BMI, waist-to-hip ratio is three times
stronger than BMI in predicting the risk of a heart attack. Larger waist size (which
reflects the amount of abdominal fat) was harmful, whereas larger hip size (which
may indicate the amount of lower body muscle) was protective.
The
waist-to-hip ratio is calculated by dividing the waist measure by the hip
measure. The cut off point for cardiovascular risk factors is less than 0.85 for
women and 0.90 for men. A higher number denotes more risk
Dr.
Yusuf concludes: "Our findings suggest that substantial reassessment is
needed of the importance of obesity for cardiovascular disease in most regions
of the world."
Dr.
Yusuf is a professor of medicine of the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine
at McMaster University, a cardiologist at Hamilton Health Sciences. He also
holds the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario Chair in Cardiology at McMaster
University. The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research,
the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario and 37 other funding sources,
including unrestricted support from several pharmaceutical companies.
In
an accompanying published comment Charlotte Krageland of the University of Oslo,
Norway states: "The main message from the new report is that current
practice with body mass index as the measure of obesity is obsolete. For the
assessment of risk associated with obesity, the waist-to-hip ratio, and not the
body mass index, is the preferred simple measure."
Dr.
John Kelton, dean of the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine and dean and
vice-president, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, said: "The
results of this study will change, on an international scope, how we evaluate
patients' risks for heart disease. Being able to easily identify the risk will
have a beneficial effect on awareness and treatment."
Dr.
Alan Bernstein, president of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, said:
"We've long been aware of the link of obesity and cardiovascular disease.
Thanks to the research conducted by Dr. Yusuf, we now have a better
understanding of the risk related to obesity which can lead to more effective
health interventions.
Laura
Syron, vice-president of research for the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario,
said: "For the Foundation it is immensely gratifying to see yet another in
a series of successes by Dr. Yusuf and his team. We have supported this
initiative from the beginning and it has been wonderful to follow the tale of
the tape from Ontario to the world."
Murray
Martin, President and CEO of Hamilton Health Sciences, said: "Part of our
mission as a teaching hospital is to advance health care through education and
research. Dr. Yusuf's commitment to finding answers to important heart health
questions that affect people around the world exemplifies the leadership we
embrace at Hamilton Health Sciences." (November
2005)