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Body mass index and diabetes in Asia: a cross-sectional pooled analysis of 900,000 individuals in the Asia cohort consortium
Authors:Boffetta Paolo  McLerran Dale  Chen Yu  Inoue Manami  Sinha Rashmi  He Jiang  Gupta Prakash Chandra  Tsugane Shoichiro  Irie Fujiko  Tamakoshi Akiko  Gao Yu-Tang  Shu Xiao-Ou  Wang Renwei  Tsuji Ichiro  Kuriyama Shinichi  Matsuo Keitaro  Satoh Hiroshi  Chen Chien-Jen  Yuan Jian-Min  Yoo Keun-Young  Ahsan Habibul  Pan Wen-Harn  Gu Dongfeng  Pednekar Mangesh Suryakant  Sasazuki Shizuka  Sairenchi Toshimi  Yang Gong  Xiang Yong-Bing  Nagai Masato  Tanaka Hideo  Nishino Yoshikazu  You San-Lin  Koh Woon-Puay  Park Sue K  Shen Chen-Yang  Thornquist Mark  Kang Daehee  Rolland Betsy  Feng Ziding  Zheng Wei  Potter John D
Institution:Mount Sinai School of Medicine, The Tisch Cancer Institute, New York, New York, United States of America. paolo.boffetta@mssm.edu
Abstract:

Background

The occurrence of diabetes has greatly increased in low- and middle-income countries, particularly in Asia, as has the prevalence of overweight and obesity; in European-derived populations, overweight and obesity are established causes of diabetes. The shape of the association of overweight and obesity with diabetes risk and its overall impact have not been adequately studied in Asia.

Methods and Findings

A pooled cross-sectional analysis was conducted to evaluate the association between baseline body mass index (BMI, measured as weight in kg divided by the square of height in m) and self-reported diabetes status in over 900,000 individuals recruited in 18 cohorts from Bangladesh, China, India, Japan, Korea, Singapore and Taiwan. Logistic regression models were fitted to calculate cohort-specific odds ratios (OR) of diabetes for categories of increasing BMI, after adjustment for potential confounding factors. OR were pooled across cohorts using a random-effects meta-analysis. The sex- and age-adjusted prevalence of diabetes was 4.3% in the overall population, ranging from 0.5% to 8.2% across participating cohorts. Using the category 22.5–24.9 Kg/m2 as reference, the OR for diabetes spanned from 0.58 (95% confidence interval CI] 0.31, 0.76) for BMI lower than 15.0 kg/m2 to 2.23 (95% CI 1.86, 2.67) for BMI higher than 34.9 kg/m2. The positive association between BMI and diabetes prevalence was present in all cohorts and in all subgroups of the study population, although the association was stronger in individuals below age 50 at baseline (p-value of interaction<0.001), in cohorts from India and Bangladesh (p<0.001), in individuals with low education (p-value 0.02), and in smokers (p-value 0.03); no differences were observed by gender, urban residence, or alcohol drinking.

Conclusions

This study estimated the shape and the strength of the association between BMI and prevalence of diabetes in Asian populations and identified patterns of the association by age, country, and other risk factors for diabetes.
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