Obesity does not protect from subarachnoid haemorrhage: Pooled analysis of 3 large prospective Nordic cohorts
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23782Dato
2021-11-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Rautalin, Ilari; Kaprio, Jaakko; Ingebrigtsen, Tor; Jousilahti, Pekka; Løchen, Maja-Lisa; Romundstad, Pål Richard; Salomaa, Veikko; Vik, Anne; Wilsgaard, Tom; Mathiesen, Ellisiv B.; Sandvei, Marie Søfteland; Korja, MiikkaSammendrag
Methods: We conducted a collaborative study of three prospective population-based Nordic cohorts by combining comprehensive baseline data from 211972 adult participants collected between 1972 and 2012, with follow-up until the end of 2018. Primarily, we compared the risk of SAH between three BMI categories: (1) low (BMI<22.5), (2) moderate (BMI: 22.5–29.9), and (3) high (BMI≥30) BMI and evaluated the modifying effects of smoking and hypertension on the associations.
Results: We identified 831 SAH events (mean age 62 years, 55% women) during the total follow-up of 4.7 million personyears. Compared with the moderate BMI category, persons with low BMI had an elevated risk for SAH (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 1.30 [1.09–1.55]), whereas no significant risk difference was found in high BMI category (HR, 0.91 [0.73–1.13]). However, we only found the increased risk of low BMI in smokers (HR, 1.49 [1.19–1.88]) and in hypertensive men (HR, 1.72 [1.18–2.50]), but not in nonsmokers (HR, 1.02 [0.76–1.37]) or in men with normal blood pressure values (HR, 0.98 [0.63–1.54]; interaction HRs, 1.68 [1.18–2.41], P=0.004 between low BMI and smoking and 1.76 [0.98–3.13], P=0.06 between low BMI and hypertension in men).
Conclusion: Smoking and hypertension appear to explain, at least partly, the previously reported inverse association between BMI and the risk of SAH. Therefore, the independent role of BMI in the risk of SAH is likely modest.