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(Circulation. 2007;116:375-384.)
© 2007 American Heart Association, Inc.
Epidemiology |
From the Framingham Heart Study (E.I., C.S.F., J.M.M., E.J.B., M.J.K., C.J.O., T.J.W., R.B.D., P.A.W., R.S.V.), Framingham, Mass; Department of Biostatistics (L.M.S.) and Department of Mathematics (M.J.K., R.B.D.), Boston University, Boston, Mass; Division of Endocrinology (C.S.F.), Brigham and Womens Hospital, Boston, Mass; General Internal Medicine (J.M.M.), Cardiology Division and Preventive Medicine (E.J.B., R.S.V.), and Department of Neurology (P.A.W.), Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass; Department of Radiology (J.F.P.), New England Medical Center, Boston, Mass; Department of Medicine (J.B.M.) and Cardiology Division (C.J.O., T.J.W.), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (C.J.O.), Bethesda, Md.
Correspondence to Ramachandran S. Vasan, MD, Framingham Heart Study, 73 Mount Wayte Ave, Framingham, MA 01702–5803. E-mail vasan{at}bu.edu
Received January 5, 2007; accepted April 3, 2007.
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results— We examined prevalence of subclinical disease in 1938 Framingham Study participants (mean age, 57 years; 59% women) by use of 5 tests (electrocardiography, echocardiography, carotid ultrasound, ankle-brachial pressure, and urinary albumin excretion) and stratified by body mass index (BMI) (normal, <25; overweight, 25 to <30.0; obese,
30 kg/m2) and waist circumference (WC) (increased,
88 cm for women or
102 cm for men). We investigated risk of overt CVD associated with adiposity according to presence versus absence of subclinical disease on any of the 5 tests. Prevalence of subclinical disease was higher in overweight (40.0%; adjusted odds ratio, 1.68) and obese individuals (49.7%; odds ratio, 2.82) compared with individuals with normal BMI (29.3%) and in individuals with increased WC (44.9%; odds ratio, 1.67) compared with normal WC (31.9%). On follow-up (mean 7.2 years), 139 participants had developed overt CVD. Presence of subclinical disease was associated with >2-fold risk of overt CVD in all BMI and WC strata, with no evidence of an interaction between BMI and subclinical disease. CVD risk was attenuated in participants with obesity or increased WC but without subclinical disease (adjusted hazard ratio for obesity, 1.57; 95% confidence interval, 0.74 to 3.33; adjusted hazard ratio for increased WC, 1.22; 95% confidence interval, 0.69 to 2.15), compared with individuals with normal BMI or WC and no subclinical disease, respectively.
Conclusions— In our community-based sample, overweight and obesity were associated with high prevalence of subclinical disease, which partly contributed to the increased risk of overt CVD in these strata.
Key Words: atherosclerosis cardiovascular diseases epidemiology obesity risk factors
| Introduction |
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Clinical Perspective p 384
Obesity is associated with increased prevalence of metabolic risk factors and hemodynamic overload of the cardiovascular system. Thus, obese individuals are likely to have a high burden of subclinical disease, which may contribute to the increased risk of development of overt CVD. However, the extent and prognostic importance of subclinical disease in obesity has not been evaluated systematically. Previous studies that address this question have typically focused on single measures of subclinical disease.3–6 To our knowledge, no prior study has evaluated whether a greater burden of subclinical disease in overweight/obese individuals may be a risk marker for increased CVD hazard (analogous to that posed by the increased burden of risk factors). If so, assessment of subclinical disease may aid in risk stratification of individuals by body mass index (BMI) category.
In the present study we investigated the prevalence of subclinical disease in obesity (generalized and abdominal) by use of a panel of 5 common tests. We postulated that a greater burden of subclinical disease would be a marker of increased risk of overt CVD.
| Methods |
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Of 3532 attendees, we excluded 1594 participants for the following reasons: prevalent CVD (n=415); unavailable data for: ECGs (n=6), measurement of urinary albumin excretion (n=460), ankle-brachial blood pressure (n=49), carotid ultrasound data (n=70), echocardiographic data (n=587); or a BMI <18.5 kg/m2 (n=7). After exclusions, 1938 individuals (mean age, 57.4 years; 59% women) remained eligible. The clinical features and incidence of overt CVD were compared in participants excluded because of unavailable data on subclinical disease measures and those included in our sample (see Data Supplement Table I and Results).
Subclinical Disease Measures and Subclinical Disease Score
The measures and definitions of subclinical disease were selected on the basis of published literature and their availability at the 6th examination (Table 1). Sex-specific Cornell voltage criteria were applied to computerized standard 12-lead resting ECGs to evaluate left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH).8 Routine transthoracic echocardiography was performed, and M-mode measurements of the left ventricle were obtained with a leading-edge–to–leading-edge technique.9 Left ventricular ejection fraction was estimated on the basis of visual assessment of contractile performance in multiple views.9 Inter- and intrareader correlations of echocardiographic measurements were excellent.10 Carotid ultrasound was performed according to a standardized protocol11 with a high-resolution 7.5-MHz transducer for the common carotid artery (CCA) and a 5.0-MHz transducer for the carotid bulb and internal carotid artery.12 Intima-media thickness (IMT) was measured with gated diastolic images of the left and right carotid arteries at the level of the distal common carotid artery, the carotid artery bulb, and the proximal 2 cm of the internal carotid artery. The maximal IMT at each site was defined as the mean of the maximal IMT measured at the near and far walls of the vessel. The internal carotid artery IMT was defined as the mean of the maximal IMT measurements for the carotid artery bulb and the internal carotid artery on the right and left sides. On the basis of 25 replicate readings by 2 separate readers, intraclass correlation coefficients for the maximum internal carotid artery and common carotid artery IMT were 0.86 and 0.90, respectively.12
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Ankle-brachial blood pressure measurements were obtained in standardized fashion with an 8-MHz Doppler pen probe and an ultrasonic Doppler flow detector (Parks Medical Electronics Inc., Aloha, Ore).13 Urinary albumin excretion was assessed by estimation of the albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR) on a spot urine sample. The urinary albumin concentration was measured with an immunoturbidometric assay (Tina-Quant Albumin Assay, Roche Diagnostics), and the urinary creatinine concentration with a modified Jaffe method. Intraassay coefficients of variation were 7.2% and 2.3%, respectively, for the 2 assays.14 The UACR measured in a spot urine sample is highly correlated with 24-hour urine albumin excretion.15
We chose to dichotomize subclinical disease measures with cut points described in the literature, even though these measures have a continuous distribution. Such an approach facilitates the assessment of prevalence of subclinical disease, and simplifies the evaluation of its prognostic importance. An abnormal test on any of the 5 available measures (Table 1) was regarded as indicative of subclinical disease. In the case of echocardiography and carotid sonography, presence of any abnormality (of the 3 potential abnormalities) was considered to reflect subclinical disease. Apart from the assessment of subclinical disease as a binary condition, we also constructed a subclinical disease score, which ranged from 0 (no subclinical disease on any test) to 5 (evidence of subclinical disease on all tests), based on the number of abnormal tests. To simplify interpretation, each of the tests was weighted equally, similar to the approach used previously by Kuller et al.21
Follow-Up and Outcome Events
The follow-up period was from the baseline examination (1995 to 1998) to December 31, 2005. All participants were under longitudinal surveillance for the occurrence of CVD events. An end point adjudication committee, which comprised experienced investigators, reviewed hospitalization and physician office visit records for all suspected CVD events.
The outcome for the present investigation was the occurrence of a first overt CVD event on follow-up, defined as a composite of coronary heart disease (recognized or unrecognized myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, coronary insufficiency, or coronary heart disease death), cerebrovascular disease (stroke or transient ischemic attack), congestive heart failure, and intermittent claudication. The diagnostic criteria for CVD events have been detailed elsewhere.22
Statistical Analyses
Participants were categorized into 3 BMI groups (normal weight: BMI, 18.5 to <25.0 kg/m2; overweight: BMI, 25.0 to <30 kg/m2; obese: BMI,
30.0 kg/m2)23; and into 2 WC groups (normal WC, <88 cm [women] or <102 cm [men]; increased WC,
88 cm (women) or
102 cm [men]).24 First, we determined the prevalence of different measures of subclinical disease in each BMI/WC category. Age- and sex-adjusted logistic regression models were constructed to assess the cross-sectional associations of overweight, obesity, and increased WC with the prevalence of subclinical disease (a score of 1 or more), with participants who had normal BMI or normal WC, respectively, as referent.
Next, we calculated age- and sex-adjusted incidence rates of CVD for the BMI and WC categories overall, and stratifying by presence of subclinical disease. We used age- and sex-adjusted Cox regression to assess the risk of a first CVD event in participants with overweight or obesity (participants with normal BMI as referent), and in individuals with increased WC (participants with normal WC as referent) after confirmation that the assumption of proportionality of hazards was met. We did not evaluate multivariable models that incorporated known risk factors (such as blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, and serum cholesterol) because these factors are strongly associated with overweight and obesity, and therefore are on the causal path from excess adiposity to subclinical disease to overt CVD; our objective was not to assess if subclinical disease predicted CVD above and beyond traditional risk factors. We performed the following analyses of the relations of BMI or WC categories, subclinical disease, and CVD incidence hierarchically: A, with no adjustment for subclinical vascular disease (models included only age, sex, and BMI or WC category); B, with adjustment for subclinical disease modeled as a dichotomous variable (models included presence [score
1] versus absence of subclinical disease [score=0]) in addition to age, sex, and BMI or WC category); C, with adjustment for subclinical disease score as an ordinal variable (models included subclinical disease score, age, sex, and BMI or WC category); and D, with stratification of the BMI or WC category by presence versus absence of subclinical vascular disease, adjusting for age and sex.
To assess the incremental utility of subclinical disease for prediction of CVD risk, we calculated the C-statistic for models A through C after incorporation of BMI as a continuous variable. The C-statistic from a Cox model is conceptually analogous to the area under a receiver-operating characteristic curve estimated for logistic models. This value estimates the probability that the evaluated model correctly identifies the individual with disease from 2 randomly paired individuals (one with and one without disease).
We examined effect modification by tests of the significance of the following 2-way interaction terms that incorporated subclinical disease and age, sex, and BMI/WC category. In secondary analyses, we repeated our analyses after adjustment for smoking in addition to age and sex. We also evaluated multivariable models that related individual measures of subclinical vascular disease to the risk of CVD. Only measures with a continuous distribution were included in these analyses. A 2-sided probability value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. All analyses were performed with SAS 9.1 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).
The authors had full access to and take full responsibility for the integrity of the data. All authors have read and agree to the manuscript as written.
| Results |
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Cross-Sectional Prevalence of Subclinical Vascular Disease by Degree of Generalized and Abdominal Obesity
Forty percent of overweight and nearly 50% of obese participants had evidence of subclinical disease in at least 1 test (as compared with 29% of individuals with normal BMI; Table 2). On a parallel note, 45% of participants with increased WC had evidence of subclinical disease (as compared with 32% of participants with normal WC). The prevalence of subclinical disease increased with BMI and WC category (Figure).
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In age- and sex-adjusted logistic regression models, overweight and obesity were significantly associated with greater prevalences of increased LV mass, increased carotid artery IMT, and carotid artery stenosis (Table 3). Obesity, but not overweight, was significantly associated with electrocardiographic LVH. Overall, overweight was associated with a 1.7-fold odds of having at least 1 subclinical disease abnormality compared with the normal BMI group, and obesity was associated with a 2.8-fold odds.
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Similarly, increased WC was significantly associated with electrocardiographic LVH, increased LV mass, and increased carotid artery IMT and carotid artery stenosis (Table 3). Overall, participants with increased WC had a 1.7-fold odds of presence of at least 1 subclinical disease abnormality compared with individuals with normal WC. The results shown in Table 3 remained robust on additional adjustment for smoking (data not shown).
Prognostic Significance of Subclinical Disease by Degree of Generalized and Abdominal Obesity
Upon follow-up (mean 7.2 years), 139 individuals (7.1%; 46% of events in women) developed a first overt CVD event (recognized myocardial infarction, n=27; unrecognized myocardial infarction, n=2; angina pectoris, n=48; coronary insufficiency, n=4; coronary heart disease death, n=3; stroke, n=14; transient ischemic attack, n=13; congestive heart failure, n=19; intermittent claudication, n=9). The age- and sex-adjusted incidence of overt CVD rose across BMI categories and with increased WC (Table 4). The presence of subclinical disease was associated with an increased CVD event rate in all groups. Interestingly, overweight participants with subclinical disease experienced CVD incidence rates comparable to obese participants with subclinical disease. Also, the incidence rates of overt CVD in participants with obesity but with no subclinical disease were similar to rates in participants with normal BMI but with subclinical disease (P=0.79). A trend existed toward lower rates of overt CVD in individuals with increased WC who had no subclinical disease compared participants with normal WC but with subclinical disease (P=0.06).
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In age- and sex-adjusted models, obesity was borderline significantly associated with an increased CVD risk in models that did not adjust for presence of subclinical disease (Table 5, BMI Model A). Overweight was not significantly associated with CVD incidence. On adjustment for the presence of subclinical disease, the association of obesity with CVD risk was attenuated and became statistically nonsignificant (Table 5, BMI Model B). In these models, the presence of subclinical disease was associated with a >2-fold risk of overt CVD (Table 5, BMI Model B). In models adjusted for the subclinical disease score (from 0 to 5), each point increase in the score was associated with a 70% increased risk of CVD (Table 5, BMI Model C). In these models, the associations of overweight and obesity with overt CVD remained statistically nonsignificant.
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In models that stratified BMI groups by presence versus absence of subclinical vascular disease (Table 5, BMI Model D), overweight or obese individuals with subclinical disease experienced a 2.6-fold risk of overt CVD, compared with participants with a normal BMI without subclinical disease (referent). Furthermore, presence of subclinical disease was a significant predictor of overt CVD also in the individuals with a normal BMI. Conversely, overweight or obese people without any subclinical disease did not experience a statistically significant increased risk of overt CVD risk compared with the referent group.
The results of analyses to assess the risk of overt CVD in participants with increased WC paralleled those for the BMI categories (Table 5). When stratified by presence of subclinical disease (Table 5, WC Model D), individuals with increased WC who had subclinical disease experienced a 2.8-fold risk of overt CVD, compared with participants with normal WC and no subclinical disease. In contrast, individuals with increased WC but without subclinical disease had risk of overt CVD comparable to the referent group. The results shown in Table 5 remained essentially unchanged on additional adjustment for smoking (data not shown).
Additional Analyses
The C-statistic for a model that incorporated age, sex and BMI (modeled as a continuous variable) was 0.70. When subclinical disease was added as a dichotomous variable, the C-statistic increased to 0.72 (P=0.02 for comparison with the model without subclinical disease). Similarly, when subclinical disease score was incorporated as an ordinal variable, the C-statistic was 0.73 (P=0.005 for comparison with the model without subclinical disease). With regard to the prognostic impact of subclinical disease, we did not observe effect modification by age, sex, or BMI/WC category (P>0.40 for all interaction terms).
In secondary analyses to relate individual subclinical disease measures to CVD risk, LV mass indexed by height, carotid artery IMT, ankle-brachial index, and UACR were positively associated with overt CVD, whereas fractional shortening was inversely related. The ECG Cornell voltage was not associated with overt CVD (Table II in the online Data Supplement).
In analyses to assess potential selection bias that resulted from exclusion of participants with unavailable subclinical disease data, we observed that excluded participants were 3 years older, more likely to be men, and had a greater mean BMI (Table I in the online Data Supplement). However, the age- and sex-adjusted CVD incidence rate in excluded participants (8.0; 95% confidence interval [CI], 6.4 to 9.6) did not differ significantly (P=0.31) from the incidence rate in our study sample (7.0; 95% CI, 5.8 to 8.2).
| Discussion |
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Comparison With Previous Studies
Several previous studies have established that subclinical disease is more common in obese and overweight people compared with individuals with a normal BMI.3–6 Also, obesity has been shown to track with progression of subclinical coronary atherosclerosis.25 However, prior studies focused typically on single measures of subclinical disease, such as LVH,3 LV dysfunction,4 carotid atherosclerosis,5 or microalbuminuria.6 The present study used a panel of 5 tests to characterize the prevalence of subclinical disease in different vascular territories and target organs. One prior study examined the extent of subclinical disease in different vascular compartments in obese individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus.26 In that investigation, BMI was a strong determinant of vascular stiffness, but no significant associations were observed between BMI and carotid artery IMT, extent of carotid artery plaques, coronary calcium score, or aortic calcium score. However, that study was based on a small sample (n=52) of individuals with diabetes mellitus and obesity, with BMI values that ranged from 27 to 49 kg/m2, which suggests that the statistical power to detect modest associations was limited and could explain the lack of associations in that study.
Subclinical disease has been established to be a powerful predictor of future overt CVD in elderly individuals19,27 and in individuals with diabetes mellitus.28 However, to our knowledge, the prognostic significance of subclinical disease in overweight and obese individuals has not been studied before. Investigators from the Cardiovascular Health Study formulated a subclinical disease index based on several tests: presence of low ankle-brachial blood pressure, carotid artery stenosis, increased carotid artery IMT, major ECG abnormalities, abnormal wall motion or ejection fraction on echocardiography, and positive responses to the Rose angina or claudication questionnaire in the absence of history of angina or claudication.21 In the present study, we modified this index by incorporation of echocardiographic LVH because it is more prevalent in the community compared with electrocardiographic LVH29 and by addition of microalbuminuria, which is an indicator of endothelial dysfunction and/or target organ damage.15,30
Distribution of Subclinical Disease in Obesity
In the present study, obesity was associated with a greater prevalence of electrocardiographic LVH, increased LV mass, increased carotid artery IMT, and carotid artery stenosis. These findings are consistent with prior studies that have demonstrated associations of obesity and electrocardiographic31 or echocardiographic3 LVH, increased carotid artery IMT,5 and carotid artery stenosis.5
Some of the subclinical disease measures in the present study were not significantly associated with obesity. However, all components of subclinical disease were selected a priori on the basis of a review of the literature. A potential reason for lack of association between low ankle-brachial blood pressure and obesity (or increased WC) may be the low prevalence of this abnormality in our middle-aged study sample, which limits our statistical power to detect modest associations. With regard to the lack of association of microalbuminuria and obesity in the present investigation, it is noteworthy that prior studies that examined this relation have yielded disparate results; some studies reported a direct association between BMI and urinary albumin,6 others noted an inverse association,32 and some others failed to observe any significant relation.33 One potential explanation for the lack of association between microalbuminuria and obesity in the present study may be the indexation of urine albumin excretion by urinary creatinine concentrations for calculation of UACR. Obese individuals may have a higher fat-free mass,34 which may be associated with greater urinary creatinine and thereby lower the proportion of obese individuals with microalbuminuria as assessed with the UACR. Another reason may be that we evaluated UACR on a single occasion, and urinary albumin excretion is variable within individuals. Misclassification that arose from such intraindividual variability may have reduced our ability to detect associations.
Strengths and Limitations
The strengths of the present study include the large community-based sample, the longitudinal surveillance for CVD events blinded to subclinical disease and BMI/WC status, and the comprehensive assessment of subclinical disease. Nonetheless, several limitations of the present study must be acknowledged. We did not evaluate coronary artery calcification as a marker of subclinical disease because such imaging was not performed at the baseline examination. Our definition of the subclinical disease score is arbitrary, and not all investigators may agree on which components should be included. Also, because our study sample was comprised of white and middle-aged participants, the generalizability of our findings to other ethnicities or age groups is unknown. Furthermore, to maximize statistical power and to reduce multiple statistical testing, we evaluated only a composite CVD outcome. Last, the exclusion of a large proportion of individuals because of unavailable subclinical disease measures is an unavoidable limitation of large epidemiological studies coupled with the requirement for availability of data for all 5 tests of subclinical disease measures. However, this means that our results must be interpreted with caution with regard to their generalizability.
Conclusions
In our large community-based sample, individuals with generalized or abdominal obesity had a high prevalence of subclinical CVD, which likely contributes to the increased risk of overt CVD associated with excess adiposity. The attenuation of the associations of obesity or increased WC with CVD risk on adjustment for presence of subclinical disease suggests that subclinical disease may be a key contributor to the increased CVD risk associated with excess adiposity. The incorporation of subclinical disease measures in multivariable models resulted in a modest increase in the C-statistic, which underscores the fact that our findings are important primarily from a pathophysiological point of view.
| Acknowledgments |
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The present work was supported by the Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation and the Swedish Society of Medicine (Dr Ingelsson), National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Contract K23-HL074077–01 (Dr Wang), N01-HC-25195, 1R01HL080124, and 2K24HL04334 (Dr Vasan), and a career development award from the American Diabetes Association (Dr Meigs). Roche Diagnostics Inc. donated reagents for microalbuminuria assays.
Disclosures
None.
| References |
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1 of the 5 tests. The prevalence of subclinical disease (on
1 tests) was higher in overweight and obese individuals compared with individuals with normal body mass index, and in individuals with increased versus normal waist circumference. The risk of overt cardiovascular disease was attenuated in overweight and obese individuals without evidence of subclinical disease, as compared with individuals with subclinical disease. In conclusion, overweight and obesity are associated with a high prevalence of subclinical disease, which partly contributed to the increased risk of overt cardiovascular disease in these strata.
| Footnotes |
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The online-only Data Supplement, which consists of tables, can be found at http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.688788/DC1.
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