Subclassification of obesity for precision prediction of cardiometabolic diseases
Coral, Daniel E; Smit, Femke; Farzaneh, Ali; Gieswinkel, Alexander; Tajes, Juan Fernandez; Sparsø, Thomas; Delfin, Carl; Bauvain, Pierre; Wang, Kan; Temprosa, Marinella; De Cock, Diederik; Blanch, Jordi; Fernández-Real, José Manuel; Ramos, Rafael; Ikram, M Kamran; Gomez, Maria F; Kavousi, Maryam; Panova-Noeva, Marina; Wild, Philipp S; van der Kallen, Carla; Adriaens, Michiel; van Greevenbroek, Marleen; Arts, Ilja; Le Roux, Carel; Ahmadizar, Fariba; Frayling, Timothy M; Giordano, Giuseppe N; Pearson, Ewan R; Franks, Paul W
(2025) Nature medicine, volume 31, issue 2, pp.
(Article)
Abstract
Obesity and cardiometabolic disease often, but not always, coincide. Distinguishing subpopulations within which cardiometabolic risk diverges from the risk expected for a given body mass index (BMI) may facilitate precision prevention of cardiometabolic diseases. Accordingly, we performed unsupervised clustering in four European population-based cohorts (N ≈ 173,000). We detected five discordant profiles
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consisting of individuals with cardiometabolic biomarkers higher or lower than expected given their BMI, which generally increases disease risk, in total representing ~20% of the total population. Persons with discordant profiles differed from concordant individuals in prevalence and future risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) and type 2 diabetes. Subtle BMI-discordances in biomarkers affected disease risk. For instance, a 10% higher probability of having a discordant lipid profile was associated with a 5% higher risk of MACE (hazard ratio in women 1.05, 95% confidence interval 1.03, 1.06, P = 4.19 × 10 -10; hazard ratio in men 1.05, 95% confidence interval 1.04, 1.06, P = 9.33 × 10 -14). Multivariate prediction models for MACE and type 2 diabetes performed better when incorporating discordant profile information (likelihood ratio test P < 0.001). This enhancement represents an additional net benefit of 4-15 additional correct interventions and 37-135 additional unnecessary interventions correctly avoided for every 10,000 individuals tested.
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Keywords: Journal Article
ISSN: 1078-8956
Publisher: Nature Research
Note: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
(Peer reviewed)