Associations and predictive performance of 11 anthropometric measures with incident type 2 diabetes: A prospective cohort study from the UK Biobank

Author:

Boonpor Jirapitcha12,Parra‐Soto Solange13,Talebi Atefeh1,Zhou Ziyi4,Carrasco‐Marin Fernanda15,Petermann‐Rocha Fanny16,Welsh Paul1,Pell Jill P.4,Sattar Naveed1,Gill Jason M. R.1,Gray Stuart R.1ORCID,Celis‐Morales Carlos17,Ho Frederick K.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Health University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

2. Faculty of Public Health Kasetsart University Sakon Nakhon Thailand

3. Department of Nutrition and Public Health Universidad del Bío‐Bío Chillan Chile

4. School of Health and Wellbeing University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

5. Centre for Healthy Living Universidad de Concepción Concepción Chile

6. Center for Biomedical Research, Faculty of Medicine Universidad Diego Portales Santiago Chile

7. Research Group on Education, Physical Activity and Health (GEEAFyS) University Católica del Maule Talca Chile

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe study aim was to investigate associations of 11 anthropometric measures with incident type 2 diabetes and compare their predictive performance.MethodsThis prospective cohort study included 161,127 White European UK Biobank participants who were free of diabetes at baseline. Anthropometric measures included height, weight, BMI, A Body Shape Index, waist circumference, waist to hip ratio, waist to height ratio (WHtR), hip circumference, visceral adiposity index, hip index, and anthropometric risk index. The associations were examined using Cox proportional hazard models. The differences in C‐index were used to compare predictive performance between BMI and other anthropometric measures.ResultsThe median follow‐up was 10.0 (interquartile range: 9.3–10.8) years, during which 6315 participants developed type 2 diabetes. All markers except height and hip index were positively associated with incident type 2 diabetes. The strongest associations were found for WHtR (hazard ratio per 1‐SD increment: 2.27 [95% CI 2.19–2.35] in women; 1.96 [95% CI 1.90–2.01] in men). Compared with BMI, WHtR and anthropometric risk index had significantly better type 2 diabetes risk discrimination.ConclusionsAlthough most adiposity markers were associated with type 2 diabetes, the magnitude of the associations differed. WHtR had the strongest associations and predictive ability for type 2 diabetes and thus could be a more suitable marker for clinical use.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Northwest Regional Development Agency

Scottish Government

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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