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Body mass index and waist circumference in relation to the risk of 26 types of cancer : a prospective cohort study of 3.5 million adults in Spain
Recalde, Martina (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
Davila-Batista, Veronica (Institut Universitari d'Investigació en Atenció Primària Jordi Gol)
Díaz, Yesika (Institut Universitari d'Investigació en Atenció Primària Jordi Gol)
Leitzmann, Michael (University of Regensburg. Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine)
Romieu, Isabelle (Emory University. Hubert Department of Global Health)
Freisling, Heinz (International Agency for Research on Cancer)
Duarte-Salles, Talita 1985- (Institut Universitari d'Investigació en Atenció Primària Jordi Gol)
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Date: 2021
Abstract: A high body mass index (BMI) has been associated with increased risk of several cancers; however, whether BMI is related to a larger number of cancers than currently recognized is unclear. Moreover, whether waist circumference (WC) is more strongly associated with specific cancers than BMI is not well established. We aimed to investigate the associations between BMI and 26 cancers accounting for non-linearity and residual confounding by smoking status as well as to compare cancer risk estimates between BMI and WC. Prospective cohort study with population-based electronic health records from Catalonia, Spain. We included 3,658,417 adults aged ≥ 18 years and free of cancer at baseline between 2006 and 2017. Our main outcome measures were cause-specific hazard ratios (HRs) with 99% confidence intervals (CIs) for incident cancer at 26 anatomical sites. After a median follow-up time of 8. 3 years, 202,837 participants were diagnosed with cancer. A higher BMI was positively associated with risk of nine cancers (corpus uteri, kidney, gallbladder, thyroid, colorectal, breast post-menopausal, multiple myeloma, leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphoma) and was positively associated with three additional cancers among never smokers (head and neck, brain and central nervous system, Hodgkin lymphoma). The respective HRs (per 5 kg/m 2 increment) ranged from 1. 04 (99%CI 1. 01 to 1. 08) for non-Hodgkin lymphoma to 1. 49 (1. 45 to 1. 53) for corpus uteri cancer. While BMI was negatively associated to five cancer types in the linear analyses of the overall population, accounting for non-linearity revealed that BMI was associated to prostate cancer in a U-shaped manner and to head and neck, esophagus, larynx, and trachea, bronchus and lung cancers in an L-shaped fashion, suggesting that low BMIs are an approximation of heavy smoking. Of the 291,305 participants with a WC measurement, 27,837 were diagnosed with cancer. The 99%CIs of the BMI and WC point estimates (per 1 standard deviation increment) overlapped for all cancers. In this large Southern European study, a higher BMI was associated with increased risk of twelve cancers, including four hematological and head and neck (only among never smokers) cancers. Furthermore, BMI and WC showed comparable estimates of cancer risk associated with adiposity. Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10. 1186/s12916-020-01877-3.
Grants: Agència de Gestió d'Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca PERIS/SLT002-16-00308
Rights: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. Creative Commons
Language: Anglès
Document: Estudi clínic ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Subject: Body mass index ; Waist circumference ; Body size ; Body fat distribution ; Adiposity ; Obesity ; Cancer ; Electronic health records
Published in: BMC Medicine, Vol. 19 (january 2021) , ISSN 1741-7015

DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-01877-3
PMID: 33441148


14 p, 1.8 MB

The record appears in these collections:
Articles > Research articles
Articles > Published articles

 Record created 2021-01-18, last modified 2022-12-21



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