Cardiometabolic Risk Assessments by Body Mass Index z-Score or Waist-to-Height Ratio in a Multiethnic Sample of Sixth-Graders

Publication Description
Convention defines pediatric adiposity by the body mass index z-score (BMIz) referenced to normative growth charts. Waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) does not depend on sex-and-age references. In the HEALTHY Study enrollment sample, we compared BMIz with WHtR for ability to identify adverse cardiometabolic risk. Among 5,482 sixth-grade students from 42 middle schools, we estimated explanatory variations (R2) and standardized beta coefficients of BMIz or WHtR for cardiometabolic risk factors: insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), lipids, blood pressures, and glucose. For each risk outcome variable, we prepared adjusted regression models for four subpopulations stratified by sex and high versus lower fatness. For HOMA-IR, R2 attributed to BMIz or WHtR was 19%–28% among high-fatness and 8%–13% among lower-fatness students. R2 for lipid variables was 4%–9% among high-fatness and 2%–7% among lower-fatness students. In the lower-fatness subpopulations, the standardized coefficients for total cholesterol/HDL cholesterol and triglycerides tended to be weaker for BMIz (0.13–0.20) than for WHtR (0.17–0.28). Among high-fatness students, BMIz and WHtR correlated with blood pressures for Hispanics and whites, but not black boys (systolic) or girls (systolic and diastolic). In 11-12 year olds, assessments by WHtR can provide cardiometabolic risk estimates similar to conventional BMIz without requiring reference to a normative growth chart.

Primary Author
Roberto P. Treviño
Laure El ghormli
Gary D. Foster
John B. Buse
HEALTHY Study Group
Henry S. Kahn
Russell Jago
Robert G. McMurray
Diane D. Stadler
Tom Baranowski

Volume
2014

Issue
2014

Start Page
421658

Publisher
Hindawi Limiteds

URL
https://www.airitilibrary.com/Publication/alDetailedMesh?DocID=P20151217004-201412-201512170025-201512170025-ab1-10

PMID
25132986



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Journal of obesity

Publication Year
2014

Publication Date
Dec 1,

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
2090-0708

Document Object Index
10.1155/2014/421658