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Visceral obesity and incident cancer and cardiovascular disease: An integrative review of the epidemiological evidence

Journal

OBESITY REVIEWS
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/obr.13088

Keywords

aging; body composition; visceral adiposity; waist circumference

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Evidence suggests a strong relationship between obesity, cancer, and cardiovascular disease risk, with visceral obesity potentially playing a more pro-oncogenic role than total body fat. However, controversial evidence exists regarding the impact of visceral obesity on CVD risk, especially with sex-specific and aging analyses. Further epidemiological studies stratified by sex and including older adults are needed to explore these associations.
Evidence shows a strong relationship between obesity, cancer and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. However, there is not enough evidence of the role of visceral obesity on both CVD and cancer. Visceral obesity may be more pro-oncogenic than total body fat. Therefore, it is important to know whether abdominal obesity can lead to both CVD and cancer. The present integrative review aimed at evaluating epidemiological evidence on the potential connection of visceral obesity in the occurrence of cancer and CVD. The following databases were searched: SCOPUS, PubMed, Science Direct, Lilacs, SciELO, Google Scholar, Web of Science, Scopus and ProQuest. The presence of visceral obesity can increase the risk of some specific cancer types, but there is controversial evidence about CVD risk based on sex-specific and ageing analyses. There is enough evidence that visceral obesity increases the risk of colorectal, pancreatic and gastro-oesophageal cancer. However, for some types of cancer such as breast, endometrial and renal, visceral obesity is a risk only in post-menopausal women. Regarding prostate cancer, the evidence is controversial. Despite the risk of visceral obesity being consistently associated with CVD in adults, this association disappears in sex-specific and older adults analyses. Moreover, in older adults, the results are controversial due to the use of different measures such as waist circumference and visceral adipose tissue. However, the evidence showing visceral obesity as a risk factor to CVD remains controversial. Sex differences, ageing and body mass index (BMI) category can potentially modify this association. Therefore, further epidemiological studies with analyses stratified by sex and samples including older adults aged 65 and older are needed.

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