Mousavi Sadegh, Bieber Katja, Zirpel Henner, Vorobyev Artem, Olbrich Henning, Papara Cristian, De Luca David A, Thaci Diamant, Schmidt Enno, Riemekasten Gabriele, Lamprecht Peter, Laudes Matthias, Kridin Khalaf, Ludwig Ralf J
Lübeck Institute of Experimental Dermatology, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.
Institute and Comprehensive Centre for Inflammatory Medicine, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2025 Feb 3;16:1516433. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2025.1516433. eCollection 2025.
Overweight and obesity are a global pandemic, contributing to death and disability-adjusted life-years. Obesity is a major factor in the onset of chronic inflammatory diseases (CIDs). Yet, several knowledge gaps remain: For several CIDs, inconsistent results have been reported, relating to their obesity-imposed risk, data on most rare CIDs remain unavailable, sex differences and racial disparities remain mostly unaddressed.
A large-scale cohort study compared the risk of developing 46 CIDs in individuals with overweight/obesity (n=3,101,824) to an equal number of non-overweight/obese individuals. Propensity score matching optimized between-group comparability, and sensitivity analyses assessed study robustness.
The risk of developing any CID was 28.48% in overweight/obese individuals versus 17.55% in non-overweight/obese controls, with a hazard ratio (95%-confidence interval) of 1.52 (1.509-1.521, p<0.0001). This risk was consistent across all sensitivity, sex-, and race-stratified analyses. Overweight and obesity were associated with an increased risk for 24 of 46 CIDs in the primary analysis and all sensitivity analyses. For 12 diseases, increased risks were confirmed to one of the two sensitivity analyses, while for 10 diseases, results were discordant. No increased risk was observed for one disease. In sex-stratified analysis, overweight and obesity posed a more pronounced risk for four CIDs in female individuals. In race-stratified analysis, overweight and obesity were linked to a higher risk for seven CIDs in White individuals and to one CID in "Black or African American" individuals.
Overweight and obesity increase the risk for the majority of CIDs in a sex- and race-specific manner.
超重和肥胖是全球性的流行病,会导致死亡和伤残调整生命年。肥胖是慢性炎症性疾病(CID)发病的主要因素。然而,仍存在一些知识空白:对于几种CID,关于其肥胖引发的风险报告结果不一致,大多数罕见CID的数据仍然无法获取,性别差异和种族差异大多未得到解决。
一项大规模队列研究将超重/肥胖个体(n = 3,101,824)与同等数量的非超重/肥胖个体患46种CID的风险进行了比较。倾向得分匹配优化了组间可比性,敏感性分析评估了研究的稳健性。
超重/肥胖个体患任何CID的风险为28.48%,而非超重/肥胖对照组为17.55%,风险比(95%置信区间)为1.52(1.509 - 1.521,p < 0.0001)。在所有敏感性、性别和种族分层分析中,这一风险都是一致的。在主要分析和所有敏感性分析中,超重和肥胖与46种CID中的24种风险增加相关。对于12种疾病,在两项敏感性分析中的一项中确认了风险增加,而对于10种疾病,结果不一致。有一种疾病未观察到风险增加。在性别分层分析中,超重和肥胖对女性个体的4种CID构成更明显的风险。在种族分层分析中,超重和肥胖与白人个体的7种CID风险较高以及“黑人或非裔美国人”个体的1种CID风险较高有关。
超重和肥胖以性别和种族特异性的方式增加了大多数CID的风险。