肥胖与性别、教育和吸烟的协同相互作用以及一生中多重发病(MM)的积累。

Jennifer L St Sauver, Brandon R Grossardt, Alanna M Chamberlain, Ekta Kapoor, Walter A Rocca
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摘要

目的:肥胖是一个潜在的可改变的危险因素,一直与多发病(MM)的发生和进展相关。然而,由于与其他风险因素的相互作用,肥胖对某些人来说可能比其他人更有问题。因此,我们研究了患者特征与超重和肥胖之间的相互作用对mm积累率的影响。方法:我们使用罗切斯特流行病学项目(REP)医疗记录链接系统,研究了2005年至2014年间居住在明尼苏达州奥姆斯特德县的年龄为20岁、40岁、60岁和80岁的4组人群。从REP指数中提取体重指数、性别、种族、民族、教育程度和吸烟状况。MM的累积率是根据截至2017年每10人年累积的新慢性疾病的数量来计算的。泊松率回归模型用于确定性状与MM积累率之间的关系。使用相互作用的相对过量风险、疾病归因比例和协同作用指数来总结加性相互作用。结果:在20岁和40岁的队列中,女性性别与肥胖之间,在20岁队列中(男女),在低教育程度与肥胖之间,在40岁队列中(男女),在吸烟与肥胖之间,观察到大于相加的协同关联。结论:针对女性、受教育程度较低的人以及肥胖的吸烟者的干预措施可能会最大程度地降低MM的积累率。然而,干预措施可能需要把重点放在中年之前的人身上,才能产生最大的效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Synergistic interactions of obesity with sex, education, and smoking and accumulation of multi-morbidity (MM) across the lifespan.

Objectives: Obesity is a potentially modifiable risk factor that has been consistently associated with the development and progression of multi-morbidity (MM). However, obesity may be more problematic for some persons compared to others because of interactions with other risk factors. Therefore, we studied the effect of interactions between patient characteristics and overweight and obesity on the rate of accumulation of MM.

Methods: We studied 4 cohorts of persons ages 20-, 40-, 60-, and 80-years residing in Olmsted County, Minnesota between 2005 and 2014 using the Rochester Epidemiology Project (REP) medical records-linkage system. Body mass index, sex, race, ethnicity, education, and smoking status were extracted from REP indices. The rate of accumulation of MM was calculated as the number of new chronic conditions accumulated per 10 person years through 2017. Poisson rate regression models were used to identify associations between characteristics and rate of MM accumulation. Additive interactions were summarized using relative excess risk due to interaction, attributable proportion of disease, and the synergy index.

Results: Greater than additive synergistic associations were observed between female sex and obesity in the 20- and 40-year cohorts, between low education and obesity in the 20-year cohort (both sexes), and between smoking and obesity in the 40-year cohort (both sexes).

Conclusions: Interventions targeted at women, persons with lower education, and smokers who also have obesity may result in the greatest reduction in the rate of MM accumulation. However, interventions may need to focus on persons prior to mid-life to have the greatest effect.

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