Limited agreement between body mass index, waist and body fat in diagnosing obesity in the Swiss population

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_E51DDD6BF822
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Limited agreement between body mass index, waist and body fat in diagnosing obesity in the Swiss population
Title of the conference
16th European Congress on Obesity (ECO), Geneva, Switzerland, 14-17 May 2008
Author(s)
Marques-Vidal Pedro Manuel, Bochud Murielle, Mooser Vincent, Paccaud Fred, Pécoud Alain, Hayoz Daniel, Waeber Gérard, Vollenweider Peter
ISBN
0307-0565
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2008
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
32
Series
International Journal of Obesity
Pages
S217
Language
english
Abstract
Objective: to assess the agreement between different anthropometric markers in defining obesity and the effect on the prevalence of obese subjects.
Methods: population-based cross-sectional study including 3213 women and 2912 men aged 35-75 years. Body fat percentage (%BF) was assessed using electric bioimpedance. Obesity was defined using established cut-points for body mass index (BMI) and waist, and three population-defined cut-points for %BF. Between-criteria agreement was assessed by the kappa statistic.
Results: in men, agreement between the %BF cut-points was significantly higher (kappa values in the range 0.78 - 0.86) than with BMI or waist (0.47 - 0.62), whereas no such differences were found in women (0.41 - 0.69). In both genders, prevalence of obesity varied considerably according to the criteria used: 17% and 24% according to BMI and waist in men, and 14% and 31%, respectively, in women. For %BF, the prevalence varied between 14% and 17% in men and between 19% and 36% in women according to the cut-point used. In the older age groups, a fourfold difference in the prevalence of obesity was found when different criteria were used. Among subjects with at least one criteria for obesity (increased BMI, waist or %BF), only one third fulfilled all three criteria and one quarter two criteria. Less than half of women and 64% of men were jointly classified as obese by the three population-defined cut-points for %BF.
Conclusions: the different anthropometric criteria to define obesity show a relatively poor agreement between them, leading to considerable differences in the prevalence of obesity in the general population.
Keywords
Obesity, Obesity/diagnosis, Body Mass Index, Waist-Hip Ratio, Body Fat Distribution, Switzerland
Open Access
Yes
Create date
04/03/2009 17:13
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:08
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