4.7 Article

Adiposity Criteria in Assessing Increased Cardiometabolic Risk in Prepubertal Children

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2019.00410

Keywords

body fat percentage; body mass index; diagnostic accuracy; obesity; overweight; sensitivity; specificity; waist-to-height ratio

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education and Culture of Finland
  2. Ministry of Social Affairs and Health of Finland
  3. Research Committee of the Kuopio University Hospital Catchment Area for the State Research Funding
  4. Finnish Innovation Fund Sitra
  5. Finnish Cultural Foundation
  6. Social Insurance Institution of Finland
  7. Foundation for Pediatric Research
  8. Diabetes Research Foundation in Finland
  9. Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research
  10. Juho Vainio Foundation
  11. Paavo Nurmi Foundation
  12. Yrjo Jahnsson Foundation
  13. Aino Eerola Trust of Finnish Medical Foundation
  14. Aarne and Aili Turunen Foundation
  15. Foundation of Kuopio University Hospital for Scientific Research
  16. Paulo Foundation
  17. city of Kuopio
  18. Orion Trust of Finnish Medical Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Objective: Adiposity induces the clustering of cardiometabolic risk factors, and pediatric adiposity is a better indicator for adulthood cardiometabolic diseases than pediatric metabolic syndrome. However, the observed prevalence of pediatric adiposity depends on the methods and cut-points used. Therefore, we aimed to define diagnostic criteria for adiposity which enable more valid identification of prepubertal children at increased cardiometabolic risk. Methods: The participants were 470 prepubertal children (249 boys) aged 6-8 years. The measures of adiposity included body mass index-standard deviation score (BMI-SDS), waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) and body fat percentage (BF%) assessed by bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Criteria for adiposity were determined by increased cardiometabolic risk. Cardiometabolic risk factors which correlated with BF% assessed by DXA in the upper but not lower half of BF% (serum insulin and plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, gamma-glutamyl transferase, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein and uric acid) were included in the cardiometabolic risk score (CMS). We computed receiver operating characteristics curves for the measures of adiposity using the >= 90th percentile of CMS as a measure of increased cardiometabolic risk, and local regression curves were graphed to demonstrate the associations of the measures of adiposity with CMS. Results: In girls, WHtR of 0.445 (area under curve 0.778, its 95% confidence interval 0.65-0.91, sensitivity and specificity 0.73) and BF% of 19.5% assessed by BIA (0.801, 0.70-0.90, 0.73) were the best overall criteria for increased cardiometabolic risk. In boys, BMI-SDS of 0.48 (0.833, 0.75-0.92, 0.76) was the best overall criterion for increased cardiometabolic risk. While local regression curves in girls showed that WHtR of 0.445 corresponds well to a point where CMS began to increase, in boys local regression curves suggest that CMS began to increase even at a lower level of BMI-SDS than 0.48. Moreover, the diagnostic ability of the measures of adiposity to exclude increased cardiometabolic risk was poorer than the ability to detect it. Conclusions: In general, the measures of adiposity have sufficient diagnostic accuracy to be utilized as the screening tool for increased cardiometabolic risk. The observed cut-points for adiposity were lower than the traditional cut-points for adiposity.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available