4.7 Article

LDL Cholesterol Rises With BMI Only in Lean Individuals: Cross-sectional US and Spanish Representative Data

Journal

DIABETES CARE
Volume 41, Issue 10, Pages 2195-2201

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/dc18-0372

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Agencia Aragonesa para la Investigacion y el Desarrollo (ARAID)
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [PI14/00009, PI13/0288, PI16/01460]
  3. European Regional Development Fund/European Social Fund Investing in your future
  4. European H2020 Environment program (ATHLOS project EU H2020-Project) [635316]

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OBJECTIVEElevated LDL cholesterol (LDLc) is not strongly associated with obesity or metabolic syndrome (MS), but this relationship repeatedly has been examined assuming a linear association. This study aimed to assess the dose-response relationship between body mass index (BMI) or waist circumference (WC) and LDLc and to evaluate its link to metabolic impairment.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSParticipants in the continuous National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, 1999-2010) (n = 12,383) and the Study on Nutrition and Cardiovascular Risk (ENRICA, 2008-2010) (n = 11,765), representative samples of U.S. and Spanish noninstitutionalized populations, were cross-sectionally investigated. LDLc was modeled with age- and sex-adjusted regressions, with BMI and/or WC as explanatory variables included in models as two-segment linear and natural cubic splines.RESULTSIn NHANES and ENRICA, slopes of the BMI-LDLc association changed (P < 0.001) at BMI 27.1 and 26.5 kg/m(2), respectively, forming an inverted U shape. Below these BMI inflection points, LDLc rose 2.30 and 2.41 mg/dL per kg/m(2) (both P < 0.001). However, above said points, LDLc declined -0.37 and -0.38 mg/dL per kg/m(2) (both P < 0.001). The WC-LDLc relationship was similar to the BMI-LDLc relationship. Accumulation of MS traits was associated with a weakening of the positive BMI-LDLc association among lean participants (below the BMI inflection point). Aging shifted the inflection point of the BMI-LDLc relationship to lower BMI values.CONCLUSIONSThe BMI- and WC-LDLc relationships have inverted U shapes. Diminishing associations between BMI and LDLc might indicate metabolic impairment as a result of aging or other metabolic diseases. In lean individuals, small weight losses might help to lower LDLc for cardiovascular prevention.

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