Ethnic-specific BMI and waist circumference thresholds

Peter T Katzmarzyk, George A Bray, Frank L Greenway, William D Johnson, Robert L Newton Jr, Eric Ravussin, Donna H Ryan, Claude Bouchard, Peter T Katzmarzyk, George A Bray, Frank L Greenway, William D Johnson, Robert L Newton Jr, Eric Ravussin, Donna H Ryan, Claude Bouchard

Abstract

BMI and waist circumference (WC) are used to identify individuals with elevated obesity-related health risks. The current thresholds were derived largely in populations of European origin. This study determined optimal BMI and WC thresholds for the identification of cardiometabolic risk among white and African-American (AA) adults. The sample included 2096 white women, 1789 AA women, 1948 white men, and 643 AA men aged 18-64 years. Elevated cardiometabolic risk was defined as ≥2 risk factors (blood pressure ≥ 130/85 mm Hg; glucose ≥100 mg/dl; triglycerides ≥150 mg/dl; high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol <40 mg/dl (men) or <50 mg/dl (women)). Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves were used to identify optimal BMI and WC thresholds in each sex-by-ethnicity group. The optimal BMI thresholds were 30 kg/m2 in white women, 32.9 kg/m2 in AA women, 29.1 kg/m2 white men, and 30.4 kg/m2 in AA men, whereas optimal WC thresholds were 91.9 cm in white women, 96.8 cm in AA women, 99.4 in white men, and 99.1 cm in AA men. The sensitivities at the optimal thresholds ranged from 63.5 to 68.5% for BMI and 68.4 to 71.0% for WC and the specificities ranged from 64.2 to 68.8% for BMI and from 68.5 to 71.0% for WC, respectively. In general, the optimal BMI and WC thresholds approximated currently used thresholds in men and in white women. There are no apparent ethnic differences in men; however, in AA women the optimal BMI and WC values are ~3 kg/m2 and 5 cm higher than in white women.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00959270.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Receiver Operating Characteristics curves for (a) BMI and (b) waist circumference for predicting the presence of two or more cardiometabolic risk factors in 6,476 white and African-American adults in the Pennington Center Longitudinal Study.

Source: PubMed

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