Relationships of obesity and fat distribution with atherothrombotic risk factors: baseline results from the Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes (BARI 2D) trial

Jeanine B Albu, Jiang Lu, Arshag D Mooradian, Ronald J Krone, Richard W Nesto, Marty H Porter, Jamal S Rana, William J Rogers, Burton E Sobel, Sheldon H Gottlieb, BARI 2D Study Group, Jeanine B Albu, Jiang Lu, Arshag D Mooradian, Ronald J Krone, Richard W Nesto, Marty H Porter, Jamal S Rana, William J Rogers, Burton E Sobel, Sheldon H Gottlieb, BARI 2D Study Group

Abstract

The impact of obesity on cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and established coronary artery disease (CAD) is controversial; whether BMI and/or waist circumference correlate with atherothrombotic risk factors in such patients is uncertain. We sought to evaluate whether higher BMI or waist circumference are associated with specific risk factors among 2,273 Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes (BARI 2D) study participants with T2DM and documented CAD (baseline data, mean age 62 years, 66% non-Hispanic white, 71% men). Multiple linear regression models were constructed after adjusting for sex, age, race/ethnicity, US vs. non-US site, diabetes duration, exercise, smoking, alcohol, and relevant medication use. First-order partial correlations of BMI with risk factors after controlling for waist circumference and of waist circumference with risk factors after controlling for BMI were also evaluated. Ninety percent of the patients were overweight (BMI > or =25 kg/m(2)); 68% of men and 89% of women had high-risk waist circumference measures (> or =102 and > or =88 cm, respectively). BMI and waist circumference, in separate models, explained significant variation in metabolic (insulin, lipids, blood pressure (BP)) and inflammatory/procoagulation (C-reactive protein, PAI-1 activity and antigen, and fibrinogen) risk factors. In partial correlation analyses BMI was independently associated with BP and inflammatory/procoagulation factors, waist circumference with lipids, and both BMI and waist circumference with insulin. We conclude that, in cross-sectional analyses, both BMI and waist circumference, independently, are associated with increased atherothrombotic risk in centrally obese cohorts such as the BARI 2D patients with T2DM and CAD.

Conflict of interest statement

DISCLOSURE

The authors declared no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Box- and-whisker plot representing the distribution of waist circumference across BMI categories stratified by sex in the Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes population. The solid circle is the median of each group. The box corresponds to the interquartile range (the first to third quartile). The whiskers extend both sides to data points within the 1.5 times the interquartile range. The circles outside of the whiskers are outliers.

Source: PubMed

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