Body-Mass Index and Mortality in Korean Men and Women
Sun Ha Jee, Ph.D., Jae Woong Sull, Ph.D., Jungyong Park, Ph.D., Sang-Yi Lee, M.D., Heechoul Ohrr, M.D., Eliseo Guallar, M.D., Dr.P.H., and Jonathan M. Samet, M.D.
Background Obesity is associated with diverse health risks,but the role of body weight as a risk factor for death remainscontroversial.
Methods We examined the association between body weight andthe risk of death in a 12-year prospective cohort study of 1,213,829Koreans between the ages of 30 and 95 years. We examined 82,372deaths from any cause and 48,731 deaths from specific diseases(including 29,123 from cancer, 16,426 from atherosclerotic cardiovasculardisease, and 3362 from respiratory disease) in relation to thebody-mass index (BMI) (the weight in kilograms divided by thesquare of the height in meters).
Results In both sexes, the average baseline BMI was 23.2, andthe rate of death from any cause had a J-shaped associationwith the BMI, regardless of cigarette-smoking history. The riskof death from any cause was lowest among patients with a BMIof 23.0 to 24.9. In all groups, the risk of death from respiratorycauses was higher among subjects with a lower BMI, and the riskof death from atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease or cancerwas higher among subjects with a higher BMI. The relative riskof death associated with BMI declined with increasing age.
Conclusions Underweight, overweight, and obese men and womenhad higher rates of death than men and women of normal weight.The association of BMI with death varied according to the causeof death and was modified by age, sex, and smoking history.
Although obesity is widely accepted as an important health risk,the optimal body-mass index (BMI) (the weight in kilograms dividedby the square of the height in meters) and the effects of beingeither underweight or overweight on the risk of death are controversial.In the Cancer Prevention Study (CPS) II,1 sponsored by the AmericanCancer Society, the rate of death was lowest among men witha BMI of 23.5 to 24.9 and among women with a BMI of 22.0 to23.4; above and below these levels, the risk of death increased.However, being overweight was not associated with an increasedrisk of death in the National Health and Nutrition ExaminationSurvey (NHANES) I, II, or III.2 The results of other studieshave been mixed3,4 and may reflect differences in age, the numberor extent of coexisting illnesses, and BMI distributions amongsubjects, as well as in analytic approaches.1,5
Since studies of the association between BMI and death havebeen conducted primarily in Western populations, it is uncertainwhether the findings of these studies can be applied to othergroups. Continental Asian populations have a higher percentageof body fat for a given BMI than do whites,6 and a World HealthOrganization (WHO) Expert Consultation proposed a new BMI cutoffof 23.0 for public health action in Asia.7 The use of this cutoff,however, was not directly supported by data on mortality.8,9Indeed, deaths from any cause were lowest among men with a BMIof 24.0 to 24.9 and women with a BMI of 25.0 to 26.9 in a representativegroup of Chinese subjects.10,11
We conducted a prospective cohort study of BMI and the riskof death from any cause and from specific diseases in more than1 million Koreans in the Korean Cancer Prevention Study (KCPS).12,13
Methods
Study Population
We enrolled 1,329,525 Koreans between the ages of 30 and 95years who had undergone one biennial medical evaluation throughthe National Health Insurance Corporation between 1992 and 1995.12,13Of the subjects, 784,870 (59.0 percent) were enrolled in 1992,367,903 (27.7 percent) in 1993, 98,417 (7.4 percent) in 1994,and 78,335 (5.9 percent) in 1995.
To avoid confounding of the association between BMI and therisk of death by preexisting disease,14,15 904 subjects whodied before January 1, 1993, were excluded from the study, aswere 87,911 subjects who reported having atherosclerotic cardiovasculardisease, cancer, liver disease, diabetes, or a respiratory diseaseat or before the initial study visit. In addition, 26,881 subjectswith missing information about BMI or alcohol intake and thosewith an extremely low BMI (less than 16.0) or short stature(1.30 m or less) were excluded. The final sample included 1,213,829subjects.
Because the study involved data that were routinely collected,consent was not specifically obtained. The institutional reviewboards of Yonsei University and the Johns Hopkins BloombergSchool of Public Health approved the study.
Data Collection
Enrollees in the National Health Insurance Corporation undergostandardized examinations every two years at local hospitals.During visits between 1992 and 1995, subjects reported on theirsmoking habits and alcohol consumption, and weight and heightmeasurements were recorded while subjects were wearing lightclothing. Subjects were seated for blood-pressure measurement.Blood samples were obtained after an overnight fast for white-cellcounts and clinical chemical analysis. Quality-control procedureswere performed in accordance with the Korean Association ofLaboratory Quality Control.
Follow-up and Outcome Classification
Deaths among subjects through December 31, 2004, were confirmedby matching the information to death records. Death certificatesfrom the National Statistical Office were identified with theuse of identification numbers assigned to subjects at birth.Abstractors coded causes of death according to the InternationalClassification of Diseases, 10th Revision.16 We used underlyingcauses as reported.
We attempted to minimize the effect of existing medical conditionson the baseline BMI by excluding all events that occurred amongsubjects during the first two years of follow-up. Thus, generalfollow-up began on January 1 of the third year after the baselinevisit. In a sensitivity analysis, we excluded the first fiveyears of follow-up.
Statistical Analysis
Proportional-hazards models were used to evaluate the associationbetween the baseline BMI and death.17 The BMI was categorizedas less than 18.5, 18.5 to 19.9, 20.0 to 21.4, 21.5 to 22.9,23.0 to 24.9, 25.0 to 26.4, 26.5 to 27.9, 28.0 to 29.9, 30 to31.9, or 32.0 or more. Analyses were performed separately inmen and women and were adjusted for the following covariates:age at enrollment (continuous variable), alcohol intake (fivecategories based on grams consumed per day: 0, 1 to 24 g, 25to 49 g, 50 to 99 g, and 100 g or more), and participation inregular physical activity (yes or no). Because the proportionof women who reported having smoked cigarettes was small, analysesin women were restricted to those who reported never havingsmoked. Analyses of men who reported having smoked were adjustedfor smoking status (never smoked, former smoker, or currentsmoker) and the number of cigarettes smoked daily among currentsmokers (1 to 9, 10 to 19, and 20 or more).
Modification of the effect of BMI was assessed by the inclusionof interaction terms of BMI category indicators with indicatorvariables for sex, age (three categories), and smoking history(two categories, one consisting of current and former smokersand one of lifetime nonsmokers). All analyses were conductedwith the use of SAS software, version 9 (SAS Institute).
Results
The average BMI was 23.2 for both sexes (Table 1), and the majorityof subjects had a BMI below 25.0. The BMI was below 18.5 in2.2 percent of men and 4.7 percent of women; above 25.0 in 23.8percent and 26.8 percent, respectively; and above 30.0 in 0.8percent and 2.4 percent, respectively. Systolic blood pressure,total serum cholesterol, fasting serum glucose level, and white-cellcount had strong, progressive associations with increasing BMIs(Table 2).
Table 2. Differences in Baseline Systolic Blood Pressure and Clinical Chemical Analyses, According to BMI.
During follow-up, 58,312 men died (including 22,249 from cancer,10,486 from atherosclerotic cardiovascular causes, and 2442from respiratory causes) and 24,060 women died (including 6874from cancer, 5940 from atherosclerotic cardiovascular causes,and 920 from respiratory causes). The shape of the curve showingthe association between BMI and the risk of death from any causewas similar in men, regardless of their smoking history, andin women who reported never having smoked (Figure 1A). The hazardratio was higher at the lowest and highest BMI values.
Figure 1. Hazard Ratios for Death from Any Cause and from Any Cause Except Respiratory, According to BMI and Smoking History.
Data are from the KCPS, 19932004.12,13 The reference category was a BMI of 23.0 to 24.9. Results for men who reported having smoked cigarettes were further adjusted for whether the subject was a former smoker or a current smoker and the number of cigarettes smoked per day (1 to 9, 10 to 19, and 20 or more). All hazard ratios were adjusted for age.
Men with a BMI of 23.0 to 24.9 who reported never having smokedhad the lowest risk of death from any cause (Table 1 of theSupplementary Appendix, available with the full text of thisarticle at www.nejm.org). As compared with men with a BMI of23.0 to 24.9, men who reported never having smoked had a hazardratio for death from any cause of 1.29 (95 percent confidenceinterval, 1.15 to 1.44) in association with a BMI of less than18.5, a hazard ratio of 1.04 (95 percent confidence interval,0.98 to 1.10) in association with a BMI of 25.0 to 29.9, anda hazard ratio of 1.71 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.44to 2.03) in association with a BMI of 30.0 or more. As comparedwith men with a BMI of 23.0 to 24.9, men who reported havingsmoked had a hazard ratio for death from any cause of 1.36 (95percent confidence interval, 1.30 to 1.42) in association witha BMI of less than 18.5, a hazard ratio of 0.98 (95 percentconfidence interval, 0.95 to 1.01) in association with a BMIof 25.0 to 29.9, and a hazard ratio of 1.31 (95 percent confidenceinterval, 1.18 to 1.45) in association with a BMI of 30.0 ormore.
Among women (with the analysis restricted to those who reportednever having smoked), the risk of death from any cause was lowestfor those with a BMI of 23.0 to 24.9 and similar for those witha BMI of 20.0 to 26.4 (Figure 1A, and Table 2 of the Supplementary Appendix).As compared with women with a BMI of 23.0 to 24.9, women witha BMI of less than 18.5 had a hazard ratio for death from anycause of 1.17 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.09 to 1.26),women with a BMI of 25.0 to 29.9 had a hazard ratio of 1.04(95 percent confidence interval, 1.00 to 1.08), and women witha BMI of 30.0 or more had a hazard ratio of 1.20 (95 percentconfidence interval, 1.10 to 1.30).
The association between BMI and the risk of death accordingto the cause of death had a similar pattern of variation forboth sexes (Figure 2, and Table 1 and Table 2 of the Supplementary Appendix).The risk of death from respiratory causes decreased progressivelywith increasing BMI, whereas the risk of death from atheroscleroticcardiovascular causes increased steadily with increasing BMI.The risk of death from cancer increased at a BMI above 26.0to 28.0. Deaths from respiratory causes explained some of theincrease in the risk of death at a low BMI (Figure 1B). Fordeaths associated with lung disease, the association betweenBMI and the risk of death was similar for the major categoriesof pulmonary illnesses, including tuberculosis, chronic obstructivepulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, and pneumonia; the associationpersisted after the exclusion of the first five years of follow-up.With this exclusion, the hazard ratio for death from respiratorycauses that was associated with a decrease in BMI of 1.0 was1.26 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.20 to 1.31) among menwho reported never having smoked, 1.25 (95 percent confidenceinterval, 1.22 to 1.27) among men who reported having smoked,and 1.08 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.05 to 1.12) amongwomen.
Figure 2. Hazard Ratios for Death from Cancer and from Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular and Respiratory Causes, According to BMI and Smoking History.
Data are from the KCPS, 19932004.12,13 The reference category was a BMI of 23.0 to 24.9. Results for men who reported having smoked cigarettes were further adjusted for whether the subject was a former smoker or a current smoker and the number of cigarettes smoked per day (1 to 9, 10 to 19, and 20 or more). The number of deaths from respiratory causes among subjects with a BMI of 30.0 or more was too small to yield a reliable estimate of relative risks. All hazard ratios were adjusted for age. Panels A, B, and C have different scales for hazard ratios in the vertical axes.
The relative increase in the risk of death from any cause thatwas associated with a high BMI was dependent on age (Figure 3).For both sexes, the highest relative risks associated with ahigh BMI were observed among subjects younger than 50 yearsof age. An increase in BMI to more than 25.0 was not associatedwith an increased risk of death from any cause among men orwomen who were 65 years or older at baseline. The interactionbetween BMI and age was significant (P<0.001), as were interactionsbetween BMI and sex and BMI and smoking history (P<0.001for both).
Figure 3. Hazard Ratios for Death from Any Cause among Men and Women with No History of Smoking, According to Age Group and BMI.
Data are from the KCPS, 19932004.12,13 The reference category was a BMI of 23.0 to 24.9. All hazard ratios were adjusted for age. Panel A and Panel B have different scales for hazard ratios.
We explored whether the association between BMI and the riskof death from atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease could beexplained by systolic blood pressure or levels of blood glucoseor cholesterol. As expected, adjustment for these factors attenuatedthis association (Table 3). Analyses of death from any cause,from cancer, and from respiratory causes adjusted for risk factorsare shown in Tables 3, 4, and 5, respectively, of the Supplementary Appendix.
Table 3. Hazard Ratios for Death from Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Causes, According to BMI.
Discussion
Our study confirms the findings of previous studies demonstratingthat the relationship between death from any cause and BMI followsa J-shaped pattern.18 This curve reflects the association betweenBMI and the risk of death from all the major diseases. Amongsubjects with a low BMI, the increased risk was driven by respiratoryand other causes, whereas among those with a high BMI, it wasassociated with cancer and cardiovascular diseases. Similarpatterns were observed in smokers and those who reported neverhaving smoked, implying that confounding by a history of smokingcannot explain the J-shaped relationship. This J-shaped riskrelationship has been documented in several of the largest,but not all, cohorts.2,11 The patterns in the Korean, Chinese,and Western1,4 cohorts appear to be similar, suggesting thatthe risk of death associated with obesity among Asians is notapparent at lower BMI values, as compared with that among Westernpopulations.
Because of the weight distribution of the subjects, the KCPSprobably contains substantially more information about peoplewith lower BMI values than do studies with Western cohorts.At a BMI of less than 18.5, hazard ratios for death were significantlyincreased, with the excess due, in part, to respiratory causes.In the Nurses' Health Study, Hu et al.5 showed that an increasedrisk in the leanest group was primarily due to an increase inCOPD and cirrhosis. Other studies have also noted a substantiallyincreased risk of death among subjects with a low BMI,1,2 althoughthey did not provide information about the cause of death. Heet al.10 identified an increased risk of death among underweightChinese subjects, which persisted after the exclusion of subjectswith baseline cardiovascular disease, cancer, renal disease,or COPD, and an increased risk of death during the first threeyears of follow-up. In the CPS II study, Calle et al.1 showeda greater increase in the risk of death associated with beingunderweight among those with a history of disease at enrollmentthan among those without such a history; relative risks in CPSII were similar to estimates in the KCPS for BMI values of lessthan 18.5. In NHANES,2 relative risks were higher overall (valueswere as high as 3.0 across the age and smoking strata), butanalyses included subjects with coexisting illnesses and includeddeaths during the entire follow-up period.
To reduce the potential for attributing an excess risk of beingunderweight to weight loss associated with illness, we excludedfrom all analyses subjects reporting diagnoses of certain chronicdiseases at enrollment, as well as during the first two yearsof follow-up, and we conducted sensitivity analyses that excludedthe first five years of follow-up. Although this analytic strategymay be effective if the illness causing rapid weight loss leadsto death, reverse causation may influence risk estimates ifthe disease course is lengthy and accompanied by weight loss.19COPD has these characteristics, and subjects with more severedisease had greater weight loss over time.20 In several studies,after adjusting for lung function, the BMI remained a significantpredictor of death.21,22 Thus, for COPD, the relationship betweenBMI and the risk of death may represent both reverse causationand a true causal role for body weight in determining prognosis.For tuberculosis, wasting at the time of diagnosis is a featureof the disease, and body weight predicts the short-term riskof death.23,24,25 The exclusion of the first two years of follow-upshould address any acute contribution of active tuberculosisto body weight.
Since the distribution of respiratory causes of death may differbetween Koreans and inhabitants of Western countries, it maynot be possible to generalize our findings to other populations.Deaths from respiratory causes were due to tuberculosis in 19.3percent of subjects, to pneumonia in 27.9 percent, to COPD in27.8 percent, and to asthma in 24.7 percent.
For deaths from atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, thehazard ratio increased steadily with increasing BMI, similarto the findings in a smaller cohort study of insured Koreans.26Information on selected cardiovascular risk factors showed anincreasingly unfavorable profile with increasing BMI, but theserisk factors alone did not explain the excess risk of deathfrom atherosclerotic cardiovascular causes associated with obesity.Although misclassification of cardiovascular risk factors, particularlythose that vary during follow-up, could partially explain thepersistent risk, the metabolic syndrome, sleep-disordered breathing,and other consequences of increased BMI are also likely to contributeto the risk associated with cardiovascular disease. The associationof BMI with the risk of death from atherosclerotic cardiovascularcauses was substantial, as has been shown in many other studies.27A few large cohorts provided reasonably precise estimates ofthe risk of death from cardiovascular causes according to BMI.Similar, progressive increases in risk associated with BMI wereseen in some studies, including the Nurses' Health Study,5,14nonsmokers in the Physicians' Health Study,4 and the CPS I,28but not in others, including CPS II,1 a U.K. cohort of particularlylean people,29 men with cardiovascular disease in the Physicians'Health Study,30 and a representative sample of Chinese men andwomen.11
The risk of death from cancer increased slightly among overweightmen and women and more substantially among subjects with a BMIabove 30.0 at enrollment; we observed no excess risk among subjectswho had a low BMI at enrollment. In a meta-analysis by McGee,27pooled estimates of the risk of death from cancer that comparedobese subjects with those of normal weight were much smaller 1.10 for women and 1.06 for men than in ourstudy. The Nurses' Health Study reported risks similar to thosein our study, but risks in similar BMI strata were lower inCPS I and II.1,31 Distributions of deaths according to the typeof the primary tumor differ between Korean and U.S. populations.32Nonetheless, our findings indicate that obesity does contributeto Korea's cancer burden.
As has been reported in other populations, we found that theassociation between BMI and the risk of death varied accordingto age, with little evidence of increased risk among obese subjectsover the age of 65 years. This effect modification has beenthe subject of controversy because BMI is less well correlatedwith adiposity in the elderly and because of the increased probabilityof undiagnosed diseases and survivor effects in this age group.33Substantial interest exists, however, in conducting an estimationof the future burden of obesity as today's obese children andyoung adults grow older.2,34,35 In other studies, investigatorsshowed that an older age at enrollment (the variable used inour analysis) attenuated the risk associated with obesity.28,36In fact, in CPS I, overweight and obesity were not associatedwith an increased risk of death among subjects older than 85years.28 In a recent report by Flegal et al.2 of follow-up datafrom NHANES I, II, and III, subjects in the oldest age group(70 years or older) who had a BMI of more than 25 were not atincreased risk for death. Our evidence provides support forthis modification of effect by age, but this effect has notbeen observed in all populations.4
The association of BMI in the overweight and obese range withan increased risk of death from atherosclerotic cardiovascularcauses and cancer suggests that control of excess adipositymay reduce the two most important causes of death among Koreans.The inverse association between BMI and the risk of death fromrespiratory causes partly explains the J-shaped relationshipbetween BMI and the risk of death from any cause, but furtherresearch is warranted to examine the extent of reverse causationand to consider the role of other causes of an increased riskof death in association with a low BMI.
In considering whether the findings of the KCPS can be appliedto other populations, we recognize that Asian populations generallyhave a higher percentage of body fat than do Western populationsat the same BMI level.7 In a meta-analysis of the predictiveability of BMI to estimate the percentage of body fat amongvarious ethnic groups, Deurenberg et al.6 found that for thesame percentage of body fat, BMI among subjects from variousEast Asian countries was lower by 1.9 to 3.2 than that of whitesubjects. Although contributing factors are not completely understood,7Asians generally have a slighter body build than do whites,and slighter people tend to have less muscle mass and connectivetissue.37 Consequently, the WHO recommends that cutoff valuesin the definition of overweight and obesity should be lowerfor Asian populations than for Western populations.7,38 Ourobservations may prove to be useful in the evaluation of thisrecommendation.
Supported by a grant (1R03 CA94771-02) from the National CancerInstitute, National Institutes of Health, Department of Healthand Human Services, and by a grant (10526) from the Korean SeoulCity Research and Business Development Program.
No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article wasreported.
We are indebted to the staff of the Korean National Health InsuranceCorporation, to Dr. Michael Thun for his helpful comments, andto Charlotte Gerczak for her editorial assistance.
Source Information
From the Department of Epidemiology and Health Promotion, Graduate School of Public Health, Yonsei University, Seoul (S.H.J., J.P.); the National Health Insurance Corporation, Seoul (S.-Y.L.); the Department of Health Policy and Management, College of Medicine, Cheju National University, Jeju (S.-Y.L.); the Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul (H.O.) all in Korea; and the Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore (S.H.J., J.W.S., E.G., J.M.S.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Jee at the Department of Epidemiology and Health Promotion, Graduate School of Public Health, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea, or at jsunha{at}yumc.yonsei.ac.kr.
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