Association of body mass index and waist circumference with long-term mortality risk in 10,370 coronary patients and potential modification by lifestyle and health determinants
Esther Cruijsen, Nadia E. Bonekamp, Charlotte Koopal, Renate M. Winkels, Frank L. J. Visseren, Johanna M. Geleijnse, Ricardo Ney Oliveira Cobucci, Ricardo Ney Oliveira Cobucci, Ricardo Ney Oliveira Cobucci, Ricardo Ney Oliveira Cobucci

TL;DR
Overweight coronary patients had the lowest long-term mortality risk, while obesity and high waist circumference increased mortality risk.
Contribution
Identified U-shaped associations between BMI and mortality in coronary patients, with potential modification by lifestyle factors.
Findings
Overweight patients (BMI ∼27 kg/m²) had the lowest mortality risk.
Obesity (BMI ≥30) increased all-cause mortality risk in male patients.
High waist circumference was linked to higher mortality in both genders.
Abstract
Body adiposity is known to affect mortality risk in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). We examined associations of body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) with long term mortality in Dutch CAD patients, and potential and effect modification of these associations by lifestyle and health determinants. 10,370 CAD patients (mean age ∼65 y; 20% female; >80% on cardiovascular drugs) from the prospective Alpha Omega Cohort and Utrecht Cardiovascular Cohort–Secondary Manifestations of ARTerial disease study were included. Cox models were used to estimate categorical and continuous associations (using restricted cubic splines) of measured BMI and WC with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality risk, adjusting for age, sex, smoking, alcohol, physical activity and educational level. Analyses were repeated in subgroups of lifestyle factors (smoking, physical activity, diet…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Cardiovascular Disease and Adiposity · Nutrition and Health in Aging
