Combined lifestyle factors and metabolic syndrome risk: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM International Journal of Obesity Pub Date : 2024-11-08 DOI:10.1038/s41366-024-01671-8
Yunyang Deng, Qingling Yang, Chun Hao, Harry Haoxiang Wang, Tongyu Ma, Xiangyan Chen, Fei-Wan Ngai, Yao Jie Xie
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Abstract

Background/objectives: The metabolic syndrome is a complex condition influenced by many factors including lifestyle. Recently, more and more studies explored the relationships between combined lifestyle factors (often measured as lifestyle scores/indices) and metabolic syndrome due to the co-occurrence of these factors. These scores/indices considered potential interactions among lifestyle factors, offering a more comprehensive understanding of their relationship with metabolic syndrome. However, no review/meta-analysis has been conducted to summarize existing evidence. Thus, this study aimed to synthesize the associations between lifestyle scores/indices and metabolic syndrome in cross-sectional and cohort studies.

Subjects/methods: A literature search was performed in Embase and Medline. Multivariable-adjusted estimates were synthesized using random-effects models. In research where higher scores indicated better health, we used original estimates directly. In studies where higher scores denoted poorer health, we first calculated the coefficients and standard errors based on original estimates. Afterward, we reversed coefficients' directions and recalculated new estimates. Thus, the pooled estimates compared the healthiest with the least-healthy lifestyles (the highest vs. lowest scores/indices). Subgroup analyses were conducted based on study design, region, baseline time, baseline age, sex, health status, metabolic syndrome diagnosis, and lifestyles' number. Sensitivity analyses were performed by including only high-quality studies and employing leave-one-out analyses.

Results: Nineteen studies from 16 publications were included. Physical activity, diet, and smoking were the top three included lifestyle factors. Compared to participants with the least-healthy lifestyles, those with the healthiest lifestyles had a 43% lower metabolic syndrome risk (95% confidence interval = 0.41-0.73). In subgroup analyses, healthy lifestyle scores/indices were inversely associated with both metabolic syndrome prevalence in cross-sectional studies (Odds ratio = 0.62; 95% confidence interval = 0.51-0.73) and metabolic syndrome incidence in cohort studies (Odds ratio = 0.40; 95% confidence interval = 0.11-0.68). The inverse association was consistent in other subgroup and sensitivity analyses.

Conclusions: Adherence to a healthy lifestyle pattern was beneficial to metabolic syndrome prevention.

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综合生活方式因素与代谢综合征风险:系统回顾与荟萃分析。
背景/目的:代谢综合征是一种受多种因素(包括生活方式)影响的复杂疾病。最近,越来越多的研究探讨了综合生活方式因素(通常以生活方式评分/指数来衡量)与代谢综合征之间的关系,因为这些因素同时存在。这些评分/指数考虑了生活方式因素之间的潜在相互作用,从而更全面地了解了这些因素与代谢综合征之间的关系。然而,目前还没有对现有证据进行综述/总体分析。因此,本研究旨在综合横断面研究和队列研究中生活方式评分/指数与代谢综合征之间的关系:在 Embase 和 Medline 中进行了文献检索。使用随机效应模型综合了多变量调整后的估计值。在得分越高表示健康状况越好的研究中,我们直接使用了原始估计值。在得分越高表示健康状况越差的研究中,我们首先根据原始估计值计算系数和标准误差。然后,我们反转系数的方向,重新计算新的估计值。因此,汇总的估计值比较了最健康与最不健康的生活方式(最高分与最低分/指数)。根据研究设计、地区、基线时间、基线年龄、性别、健康状况、代谢综合征诊断和生活方式数量进行了分组分析。只纳入高质量的研究并采用剔除分析进行了敏感性分析:结果:共纳入了 16 份出版物中的 19 项研究。体育锻炼、饮食和吸烟是纳入研究的三大生活方式因素。与生活方式最不健康的参与者相比,生活方式最健康的参与者的代谢综合征风险降低了 43%(95% 置信区间 = 0.41-0.73)。在亚组分析中,健康生活方式评分/指数与横断面研究中的代谢综合征患病率(Odds ratio = 0.62;95% 置信区间 = 0.51-0.73)和队列研究中的代谢综合征发病率(Odds ratio = 0.40;95% 置信区间 = 0.11-0.68)均呈反向关系。在其他亚组和敏感性分析中,这种反向关系也是一致的:结论:坚持健康的生活方式有利于预防代谢综合征。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Obesity
International Journal of Obesity 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
2.00%
发文量
221
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Obesity is a multi-disciplinary forum for research describing basic, clinical and applied studies in biochemistry, physiology, genetics and nutrition, molecular, metabolic, psychological and epidemiological aspects of obesity and related disorders. We publish a range of content types including original research articles, technical reports, reviews, correspondence and brief communications that elaborate on significant advances in the field and cover topical issues.
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