Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes and Mortality Rates



We have discussed extensively over the past six years the nexus between Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes and now mortality. In a recent study by Tobias et al in NEJM there is an assumed nexus between obesity, as determined by BMI, and the impact of the combo on mortality.

Tobias et al conclude:

We observed a J-shaped association between BMI and mortality among all participants and among those who had ever smoked and a direct linear relationship among those who had never smoked. We found no evidence of lower mortality among patients with diabetes who were overweight or obese at diagnosis, as compared with their normal-weight counterparts, or of an obesity paradox.

Namely, the greater the BMI the greater the chance of death. On the other hand amongst those who did not smoke there was the interesting anomaly that mortality increased at BMI below 22.5. One often wonders what this is due to and it is common across other morbidities.

The authors continue:

Our findings with respect to the relationship between BMI and mortality due to specific causes are consistent with those of prior studies conducted in the general population. Among participants who had never smoked, the relationship of BMI to both cardiovascular mortality and cancer mortality appeared to be monotonic and linear. No significant association was observed between any BMI category and the risk of death from cardiovascular disease among participants who had ever smoked; however, participants in the lowest BMI category who had ever smoked had a significantly elevated risk of death from cancer.

Proposed biologic mechanisms of the alleged obesity paradox include an increased genetic influence and more severe diabetes among normal-weight persons with diabetes or the effect of a “metabolically obese normal weight” phenotype. However, normal-weight participants in our cohort were no more likely to report diabetes symptoms or coexisting chronic diseases or to require insulin than were overweight or obese participants. In contrast, normal- weight participants were more likely to be smokers and to have lost weight before a diagnosis of diabetes. Comparisons with this heterogeneous normal-weight group may therefore underestimate the risk of death among the overweight and obese.

Smoking is a co-morbidity state. However the overall impact of lifestyle choices must be considered more extensively amongst insurance providers. Obesity is not a pre-existing condition nor is being a smoker. They are life style choices. As such they should be assigned related risks.

Reference

Tobias, D., et al, Body-Mass Index and Mortality among Adults with Incident Type 2 Diabetes, NEJM, 370; 3, Jan 2014. http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa1304501