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The Association Between Metabolically Healthy Obesity and the Risk of Proteinuria: The Kansai Healthcare Study

Authors :
Akiko Yamada
Hiroshi Kambe
Shigeki Kinuhata
Kyoko Kogawa Sato
Keiko Oue
Hideo Koh
Tomoshige Hayashi
Michio Morimoto
Shinichiro Uehara
Mikiko Shibata
Source :
Journal of Epidemiology, Journal of Epidemiology, Vol 28, Iss 8, Pp 361-366 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background Metabolically healthy obesity seems to be a unique phenotype for the risk of cardiometabolic diseases. However, it is not known whether this phenotype is associated with the risk of proteinuria. Methods Study subjects were 9,185 non-diabetic Japanese male workers aged 40-55 years who had no proteinuria, an estimated glomerular filtration rate ≥60 mL/min/1.73 m2, no history of cancer, and no use of antihypertensive or lipid-lowering medications at baseline. Obesity was defined as body mass index ≥25.0 kg/m2. Metabolic health was defined as the presence of no Adult Treatment Panel III components of the metabolic syndrome criteria, excluding waist circumference, and metabolic unhealth was defined as the presence of one or more metabolic syndrome components, excluding waist circumference. "Consecutive proteinuria" was considered positive if proteinuria was detected twice consecutively as 1+ or higher on urine dipstick at annual examinations to exclude chance proteinuria as much as possible. Results During the 81,660 person-years follow-up period, we confirmed 390 cases of consecutive proteinuria. Compared with metabolically healthy non-obesity, metabolically healthy obesity was not associated with the risk of consecutive proteinuria (multiple-adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 0.86; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.37-1.99), but metabolically unhealthy non-obesity with ≥2 metabolic syndrome components (HR 1.77; 95% CI, 1.30-2.42), metabolically unhealthy obesity with one component (HR 1.71; 95% CI, 1.12-2.61), and metabolically unhealthy obesity with ≥2 metabolic syndrome components (HR 2.77; 95% CI, 2.01-3.82) were associated with an increased risk of consecutive proteinuria. Conclusions Metabolically healthy obesity did not increase the risk of consecutive proteinuria in Japanese middle-aged men.

Details

ISSN :
13499092
Volume :
28
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a69f20b64f7cc060cfd3787d5ddb08a2