Establishing the Nadir of the Body Mass Index-Mortality Relationship: A Case Study

Publication Description
Many studies have demonstrated a nonmonotonic relationship between mortality and body mass index (BMI), with excess mortality occurring at both low and high levels. Although much discussion and many different analyses have appeared, to our knowledge no attempt has been made to quantitatively establish the BMI at which minimum mortality (BMI min ) occurs or to establish confidence intervals for this BMI, accounting for the asymmetry of the relationship. We model the nonmonotonic relationship between BMI and mortality in 13,242 black and white participants of the NHANES-I Epidemiologic Follow-up Study to estimate the BMI at which minimum mortality occurs. In our analyses we consider the joint relationship of age, smoking status, and BMI to mortality. We present two methodologies for estimating BMI min : a logistic regression model with a transformation of BMI to accommodate asymmetry and a changepoint model as suggested by Goetghebeur and Pocock. We establish confidence intervals for BMI min using the delta method and bootstrap sampling for the logistic and the profile likelihood and bootstrap sampling for the changepoint model. We also present formal tests for the heterogeneity of BMI min by smoking status, sex, race, and age. Only the interaction between race and BMI is significant; the BMI min is somewhat higher for blacks than whites. Finally, we discuss the problem of goodness-of-fit statistics when the relationship between the characteristic and the outcome is nonmonotonic.

Primary Author
Durazo-Arvizu,Ramón
McGee,Daniel
Li,Zhaohai
Cooper,Richard

Volume
92

Issue
440

Start Page
1312

Other Pages
1319

Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group

URL
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01621459.1997.10473652

PMID
12155402



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Journal of the American Statistical Association

Publication Year
1997

Publication Date
Dec 1,

Place of Publication
Alexandria

ISSN/ISBN
0162-1459

Document Object Index
10.1080/01621459.1997.10473652