4.6 Article

A Body Shape Index and Body Roundness Index: Two new body indices for detecting association between obesity and hyperuricemia in rural area of China

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 32-36

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejim.2016.01.019

Keywords

Hyperuricemia; Obesity; A Body Shape Index; Body Roundness Index; Cardiovascular disease

Funding

  1. Twelfth Five-Year project funds (National Science and Technology Support Program of China) [2012BAJ18B02]

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Objective: The first objective was to examine whether A Body Shape Index (ABSI) and Body Roundness Index (BRI) can identify hyperuricemia in rural China. The second aim was to compare the relative strength of association between anthropometric indices and hyperuricemia. Methods: A total of 11,345 participants were involved in this cross-sectional study. Obesitymeasurements included BMI, WC, WHtR, ABSI and BRI. According to the statistical distribution of serum uric acid (SUA), we split our study population in sex-specific tertiles of SUA. Results: After adjusting for confounding variables, BRI (linear regression: 0.170; AUC: 0.641; OR: 1.459) showed more powerful predictive ability for hyperuricemia than BMI (linear regression: 0.151; AUC: 0.630; OR: 1.108), while having a similar predictive power for hyperuricemia as WHtR (linear regression: 0.191; AUC: 0.656; OR: 1.067) and WC (linear regression: 0.209; AUC: 0.658; OR: 1.047) in the female group, but not in the male group. However, ABSI (A) (linear regression: 0.089 for women, 0.121 for men; AUC: 0.589 for women, 0.578 for men; OR: 1.027 for women, 1.034 for men) and ABSI (B) (linear regression: 0.118 for women, 0.121 for men; AUC: 0.607 for women, 0.578 formen; OR: 1.049 for women, 1.034 formen) had the lowest predictive power for hyperuricemia in both sex categories. Conclusions: ABSI, BRI, BMI, WC andWHtRwere all significantly associated with hyperuricemia in both sexes. In addition, BRI rather than ABSI showed a superior predictive ability for identifying hyperuricemia than BMI in female and similar capabilities as those ofWC and WHtR in the female, but not in the male gender. (C)2016 European Federation of Internal Medicine. Published by Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.

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