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Adiposity and risk of ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke in 0·5 million Chinese men and women: a prospective cohort study

Authors :
Zhengming Chen, ProfDPhil
Andri Iona, MSc
Sarah Parish, ProfDPhil
Yiping Chen, DPhil
Yu Guo, MSc
Fiona Bragg, DPhil
Ling Yang, PhD
Zheng Bian, MSc
Michael V Holmes, PhD
Sarah Lewington, DPhil
Ben Lacey, FFPH
Ruqin Gao, MSc
Fang Liu, MBBS
Zengzhi Zhang, MSc
Junshi Chen, ProfMD
Robin G Walters, PhD
Rory Collins, ProfFRS
Robert Clarke, ProfFRCP
Richard Peto, ProfFRS
Liming Li, ProfMPH
Junshi Chen
Zhengming Chen
Robert Clarke
Rory Collins
Yu Guo
Liming Li
Jun Lv
Richard Peto
Robin Walters
Daniel Avery
Derrick Bennett
Ruth Boxall
Fiona Bragg
Yumei Chang
Yiping Chen
Huaidong Du
Simon Gilbert
Alex Hacker
Michael Holmes
Andri Iona
Christiana Kartsonaki
Rene Kerosi
Om Kurmi
Sarah Lewington
Garry Lancaster
Kuang Lin
John McDonnell
Iona Millwood
Qunhua Nie
Jayakrishnan Radhakrishnan
Paul Ryder
Sam Sansome
Dan Schmidt
Paul Sherliker
Rajani Sohoni
Becky Stevens
Iain Turnbull
Jenny Wang
Lin Wang
Neil Wright
Ling Yang
Xiaoming Yang
Zheng Bian
Ge Chen
Xiao Han
Can Hou
Pei Pei
Shuzhen Qu
Yunlong Tan
Canqing Yu
Zengchang Pang
Ruqin Gao
Shaojie Wang
Yongmei Liu
Ranran Du
Yajing Zang
Liang Cheng
Xiaocao Tian
Hua Zhang
Silu Lv
Junzheng Wang
Wei Hou
Jiyuan Yin
Ge Jiang
Xue Zhou
Liqiu Yang
Hui He
Bo Yu
Yanjie Li
Huaiyi Mu
Qinai Xu
Meiling Dou
Jiaojiao Ren
Shanqing Wang
Ximin Hu
Hongmei Wang
Jinyan Chen
Yan Fu
Zhenwang Fu
Xiaohuan Wang
Min Weng
Xiangyang Zheng
Yilei Li
Huimei Li
Yanjun Wang
Ming Wu
Jinyi Zhou
Ran Tao
Jie Yang
Chuanming Ni
Jun Zhang
Yihe Hu
Yan Lu
Liangcai Ma
Aiyu Tang
Shuo Zhang
Jianrong Jin
Jingchao Liu
Zhenzhu Tang
Naying Chen
Ying Huang
Mingqiang Li
Jinhuai Meng
Rong Pan
Qilian Jiang
Weiyuan Zhang
Yun Liu
Liuping Wei
Liyuan Zhou
Ningyu Chen
Hairong Guan
Xianping Wu
Ningmei Zhang
Xiaofang Chen
Xuefeng Tang
Guojin Luo
Jianguo Li
Xunfu Zhong
Jiaqiu Liu
Qiang Sun
Pengfei Ge
Xiaolan Ren
Caixia Dong
Hui Zhang
Enke Mao
Xiaoping Wang
Tao Wang
Xi Zhang
Ding Zhang
Gang Zhou
Shixian Feng
Liang Chang
Lei Fan
Yulian Gao
Tianyou He
Huarong Sun
Pan He
Chen Hu
Qiannan Lv
Xukui Zhang
Min Yu
Ruying Hu
Hao Wang
Yijian Qian
Chunmei Wang
Kaixue Xie
Lingli Chen
Yidan Zhang
Dongxia Pan
Yuelong Huang
Biyun Chen
Li Yin
Donghui Jin
Huilin Liu
Zhongxi Fu
Qiaohua Xu
Xin Xu
Hao Zhang
Youping Xiong
Huajun Long
Xianzhi Li
Libo Zhang
Zhe Qiu
Source :
The Lancet Global Health, Vol 6, Iss 6, Pp e630-e640 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2018.

Abstract

Summary: Background: China has high stroke rates despite the population being relatively lean. Uncertainty persists about the relevance of adiposity to risk of stroke types. We aimed to assess the associations of adiposity with incidence of stroke types and effect mediation by blood pressure in Chinese men and women. Methods: The China Kadoorie Biobank enrolled 512 891 adults aged 30–79 years from ten areas (five urban and five rural) during 2004–08. During a median 9 years (IQR 8–10) of follow-up, 32 448 strokes (about 90% confirmed by neuroimaging) were recorded among 489 301 participants without previous cardiovascular disease. Cox regression analysis was used to produce adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for ischaemic stroke (n=25 210) and intracerebral haemorrhage (n=5380) associated with adiposity. Findings: Mean baseline body-mass index (BMI) was 23·6 kg/m2 (SD 3·2), and 331 723 (67·8%) participants had a BMI of less than 25 kg/m2. Throughout the range examined (mean 17·1 kg/m2 [SD 0·9] to 31·7 kg/m2 [2·0]), each 5 kg/m2 higher BMI was associated with 8·3 mm Hg (SE 0·04) higher systolic blood pressure. BMI was positively associated with ischaemic stroke, with an HR of 1·30 (95% CI 1·28–1·33 per 5 kg/m2 higher BMI), which was generally consistent with that predicted by equivalent differences in systolic blood pressure (1·25 [1·24–1·26]). The HR for intracerebral haemorrhage (1·11 [1·07–1·16] per 5 kg/m2 higher BMI) was less extreme, and much weaker than that predicted by the corresponding difference in systolic blood pressure (1·48 [1·46–1·50]). Other adiposity measures showed similar associations with stroke types. After adjustment for usual systolic blood pressure, the positive associations with ischaemic stroke were attenuated (1·05 [1·03–1·07] per 5 kg/m2 higher BMI); for intracerebral haemorrhage, they were reversed (0·73 [0·70–0·77]). High adiposity (BMI >23 kg/m2) accounted for 14·7% of total stroke (16·5% of ischaemic stroke and 6·7% of intracerebral haemorrhage). Interpretation: In Chinese adults, adiposity was strongly positively associated with ischaemic stroke, chiefly through its effect on blood pressure. For intracerebral haemorrhage, leanness, either per se or through some other factor (or factors), might increase risk, offsetting the protective effects of lower blood pressure. Funding: UK Wellcome Trust, UK Medical Research Council, British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, Kadoorie Charitable Foundation, Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology, Chinese National Natural Science Foundation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
6
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.838b8d1e2a964a668b0336813aa8402a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30216-X