Metabolically (un)healthy obesity and risk of obesity-related cancers: a pooled study

Author:

Sun Ming1ORCID,Fritz Josef12,Häggström Christel34ORCID,Bjørge Tone56ORCID,Nagel Gabriele78,Manjer Jonas9,Engeland Anders510ORCID,Zitt Emanuel81112,van Guelpen Bethany1314ORCID,Stattin Pär3ORCID,Ulmer Hanno2ORCID,Stocks Tanja1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University , Malmö, Sweden

2. Institute of Medical Statistics and Informatics, Medical University of Innsbruck , Innsbruck, Austria

3. Department of Surgical Sciences, Uppsala University , Uppsala, Sweden

4. Northern Register Centre, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umeå University , Umeå, Sweden

5. Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen , Bergen, Norway

6. Section for Cervical Cancer Screening, Cancer Registry of Norway , Oslo, Norway

7. Institute of Epidemiology and Medical Biometry, Ulm University , Ulm, Germany

8. Agency for Preventive and Social Medicine , Bregenz (aks), Austria

9. Department of Surgery, Skåne University Hospital, Lund University , Malmö, Sweden

10. Department of Chronic Diseases, Norwegian Institute of Public Health , Bergen, Norway

11. Department of Internal Medicine III (Nephrology and Dialysis), Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch , Feldkirch, Austria

12. Vorarlberg Institute for Vascular Investigation and Treatment, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch , Feldkirch, Austria

13. Department of Radiation Sciences, Oncology, Umeå University , Umeå, Sweden

14. Wallenberg Centre for Molecular Medicine, Umeå University , Umeå, Sweden

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundStudies of obesity with or without metabolic aberrations, commonly termed metabolically unhealthy or healthy obesity, in relation to cancer risk are scarce.MethodsWe investigated body mass index (normal weight, overweight, obesity) jointly and in interaction with metabolic health status in relation to obesity-related cancer risk (n = 23 630) among 797 193 European individuals. A metabolic score comprising mid-blood pressure, plasma glucose, and triglycerides was used to define metabolically healthy and unhealthy status. Hazard ratios (HRs) and multiplicative interactions were assessed using Cox regression, and additive interactions were assessed using the relative excess risk for interaction. All statistical tests were 2-sided.ResultsMetabolically unhealthy obesity, with a baseline prevalence of 7%, was, compared with metabolically healthy normal weight, associated with an increased relative risk of any obesity-related cancer and of colon, rectal, pancreas, endometrial, liver, gallbladder, and renal cell cancer (P < .05), with the highest risk estimates for endometrial, liver, and renal cell cancer (HR = 2.55-3.00). Metabolically healthy obesity showed a higher relative risk for any obesity-related cancer and colon (in men), endometrial, renal cell, liver, and gallbladder cancer, though the risk relationships were weaker. There were no multiplicative interactions, but there were additive, positive interactions between body mass index and metabolic health status on obesity-related and rectal cancer among men and on endometrial cancer (P < .05).ConclusionsThis study highlights that the type of metabolic obesity phenotype is important when assessing obesity-related cancer risk. In general, metabolic aberrations further increased the obesity-induced cancer risk, suggesting that obesity and metabolic aberrations are useful targets for prevention.

Funder

Crafoord foundation

Swedish Cancer Society

China Scholarship Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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