Background
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) constitute the leading cause of global mortality including China [
1]. The prevalence of global obesity has steadily increased in the past few decades and has increased the risk of CVDs [
2]. Approximately 23.2% of adults in China are estimated to suffer from hypertension, and hypertension is often accompanied by obesity [
3]. Arterial stiffness (AS) has a crucial role in the pathogenesis of hypertension, which could prognosticate the risk rate of subclinical vascular disorders and cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients [
4]. Increased AS represents a valuable metric to guide the stratification of hypertensive patients based on their cardiovascular risk [
5].
Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV) is currently considered as the gold standard methodology for evaluating AS [
6], whereas brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV) is equally regard as a risk biomarker of CVDs and is strongly linked to aortic PWV and cfPWV [
7]. In the same way, baPWV has been accepted as an effective and repeatable metric tool to assessing AS in many epidemiological surveys investigation [
8‐
13]. Therefore, baPWV was adopted as a metric for AS in this study.
Body mass index (BMI) is one of the main measures for general obesity and is commonly used in clinical practice. However, research on the association between BMI and PWV in various populations, including hypertensive patients [
14‐
19], remains controversial. Studies have reported an insignificant relationship [
14,
18,
20‐
24], positive relationship [
15,
17,
19,
25‐
28], or negative relationship [
16,
29‐
33]. Many causes could interpret these apparent discrepancies including diverse sample size, different origins of the study population, ethnic and regional disparity. On the other hand, BMI is not able to differentiate fat-free muscle from fat mass. Furthermore, BMI cannot account for sex and racial differences in fat content, and it is not able to differentiate the distribution of visceral and subcutaneous fat [
34]. Thus, more studies need to verify the relationship between the BMI levels and AS based on PWV.
Waist-hip ratio (WHR), a metric of central obesity less influenced by muscle and bone mass, might be better indicate risk for CVDs associated with obesity than BMI [
35,
36]. Higher WHR was significantly correlated with increased AS based on PWV [
19,
25,
27]. This study was designed for evaluating the relationship between the BMI or WHR levels and the prevalence of increased AS and baPWV in a large real-world population of Chinese hypertensive rural adults.
Methods
Participants
All subjects in the present study were participants in the ongoing China H-type hypertension Registry Study (Registration number: ChiCTR1800017274).The data collection approaches and the established standards of inclusion or exclusion have been described previously [
37,
38]. Briefly, the study is a real-world, multicenter, observational study, conducted in March 2018 at Wuyuan, Jiangxi province of China. Enrolled population were hypertensive patients who aged 18 years and older. The exclusion criteria included psychological or nervous system impairment resulting in an inability to demonstrate informed consent, unable to be long-term followed-up according to the study protocol, or plans to relocate in the near future.
Of the eligible patients, 5, 233 completed baPWV measurements. After excluding 2 participants without BMI measurements, 78 individuals with ankle brachial index (ABI) < 0.9 [
11,
24] and 104 patients with atrial fibrillation, finally 5, 049 participants were included in our analysis (Additional file
2: Fig. 1).
Clinical data collection
Participants’ demographic characteristics (age, gender), lifestyle factors (smoking and drinking status), medical history [diabetes mellitus (DM), coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, dyslipidemia and atrial fibrillation] and medication usage were gathered by professional researchers through questionnaire survey. Atrial fibrillation was diagnosed based on a medical history and through resting supine standard 12-lead surface electrocardiogram.
Anthropometric measurements for each patient including weight, height, waistline, hipline, systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and heart rate were obtained by researchers. Waistline and hipline were measured using an inelastic measuring tape Blood pressure (BP) was measured, with the participant in a sitting position using the Omron HBP-1300 Professional Portable Blood Pressure Monitor (Kyoto, Japan) on the right arm, which was supported at the heart level. After a 5-min rest period, BP was measured four times, and SBP and DBP were calculated as the average of the last three readings. BMI was calculated as the body weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters (kg/m
2). WHR was calculated as the waistline in centimeters divided by the hipline in centimeters. In our study, subjects were divided into three categories according to BMI levels (< 25 kg/m^
2, control group; 25‐30 kg/m^
2, overweight; and ≥ 30 kg/m^
2, general obesity) [
25‐
27,
30]. Central obesity was defined as WHR ≥ 0.9 for males and ≥ 0.85 for females [
39].
Laboratory assay
Blood samples were collected utilizing venipuncture after an overnight fast of at least 12 h. The levels of plasma total homocysteine, fasting blood glucose (FBG), total cholesterol (TC), total triglyceride (TG), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), serum uric acid and creatinine, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), total and direct bilirubin, aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) were measured using automatic clinical analyzers (Beckman Coulter) In our analysis, diagnosis of incident diabetes was defined as fasting glucose > 7.0 mmol/l, and/or self-reported diabetes.. Dyslipidemia was defined as having one or more of the following features: elevated TG (≥ 2.3 mmol/L), elevated TC (≥ 6.2 mmol/L), elevated LDL-C (≥ 4.1 mmol/L) and reduced HDL-C (< 1.0 mmol/L) or on appropriate lipid-lowering medication..The estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was calculated by the equation of Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI).
Measurement of baPWV and definition of arterial stiffness
BaPWV and the ABI were measured using a BP-203RPEIII networked arteriosclerosis detection device (Omron Health Care, Kyoto, Japan). Participants received this measurement after at least 5 min of rest in the supine position in a quiet room. The measurement approaches of baPWV and ABI related to this study have been described previously [
37,
38]. The average of baPWV measured on bilateral limbs of each patient was used for analysis. While baPWV value has been shown to have prognostic significance, with a threshold of increased risk that exist around 18 m/s [
11]. Therefore, baPWV ≥ 18 m/s was considered as increased AS in our analysis.
Statistical analysis
Continuous variables are presented as the means ± standard deviation (SD) or the median (quartiles), as appropriate, and are compared using the Student's t test, one-way analysis or the Mann Whitney U test, depending on whether the quantitative data were consistent with a normal distribution. Categorical variables were presented as count (percentage), differences between groups were measured by chi-square test.
Multivariate logistic regression models based on odds ratio (OR) with their associated 95% confidence interval (CI) were used to estimate the association of BMI or WHR levels with increased AS. Linear regression models indicated were used to estimate the effect size (
β) of BMI or WHR levels on baPWV levels. The crude model was not adjusted for any confounder. The model I was adjusted for age, gender, SBP, DBP, heart rate, WHR or BMI. The model II was confounder model. The confounder model screened covariates including age, sex, SBP, DBP, heart rate, BMI, WHR, DM, CHD, history of stroke, smoking and drinking status, total homocysteine, TC, TG, HDL-C, LDL-C, AST, ALT, serum uric acid, eGFR, total and direct bilirubin, antihypertensive medications, lipid-lowering agents and antiplatelet agents except the independent variable itself. We selected these confounders on the basis that, when added to this model, it changed the matched odds ratio by at least 10 percent. Additional file
1: Table 1 showed the association of each confounder with the outcomes of interest. We considered the confounder model to be the main model. In addition, we performed tests for linear trend by entering the median value of each category of BMI or WHR levels as a continuous variable in the models.
Furthermore, the generalized additive model and smooth curve fitting (penalized spline method) was used to visually show the relationship of BMI or WHR levels with baPWV levels. Subgroup analyses were conducted with a stratified multivariate regression approach, and interaction analyses were presented in tabulated form.
All statistical analyses were performed using the statistical package R (
http://www.R-project.org, The R Foundation, version 3.4.3) and the Empower (R;
www.empowerstats.com; X&Y Solutions, Inc, Boston, MA, USA). All P-values are two-tailed, and P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Discussion
In the present study, we showed an interesting finding that there was an inverse relationship of BMI levels with increased AS or baPWV, whereas WHR levels and central obesity were positively associated with increased AS or baPWV levels in Chinese rural adults with hypertension.
PWV was increased in hypertensive patients, and the degree of PWV increase was strongly linked to age and BP [
11‐
13,
32,
40,
41]. In our study, nearly half (44.01%) of the hypertensive participants had increased AS (baPWV ≥ 18 m/s) and baPWV levels were also positively associated with age, SBP and DBP (Additional file
1: Table 1 and 3). From Table
1 follows that with increasing BMI, not only age decreased (6.78 years between the lowest and highest tertile of BMI levels), but also SBP significantly decreased (1.68 mmHg between the lowest and highest tertile of BMI levels). Even more important, DBP increased (4.52 mmHg between the lowest and highest tertile of BMI). On the contrary, concerning the comparison of the two WHR groups, there are differences in terms of SBP or DBP, and that age decreased only 0.82 year, probably not significantly. In consideration of that age and BP were closely associated with PWV levels [
11‐
13,
32,
40,
41], stratified and interaction analyses were conducted to explore the effects of age, SBP, and DBP on the association between BMI or WHR levels and the prevalence of increased AS or baPWV (Additional file
1: Table 4–10 and Additional file
1: Fig. 3). There were no interactions in terms of age and BP on the relationship between BMI or WHR levels and the prevalence of increased AS or baPWV levels.
Hypertension is often accompanied with obesity [
3]. In our study, we found that the prevalence of overweight, general obesity, central obesity and were 26.88%, 3.39% and 63.85%, respectively. In our analysis, only 5.12% of the 3, 224 patients with central obesity were general obesity according to BMI categories, but 96.49% of the 171 patients with general obesity were central obesity (Table
1 and Additional file
1: Table 2). In other words, the relative weight of general obesity in the group of elevated WHR is very small. Inversely, the relative weight of elevated WHR in the group of general obesity is very high. Considering the fact that the proportion of patients with general obesity is very small (3.39%) compared to the high proportion of subjects with central obesity (63.85%), which might explain why the correlation of BMI and WHR levels with the prevalence of increased AS based on baPWV were not coincident.
Similar to our results, Huang et al
. [
29] and Liu et al
. [
18] found that there was a negative relationship between the BMI levels and baPWV levels among male hypertension participants. However, previous studies also showed that the BMI levels were positively correlated with PWV levels in Grade I essential hypertension [
15] or obese and non-obese hypertensive patients [
17]. On the one hand, different origins of the study participants might contribute to this discrepancy. The Liu et al
. [
18] study was based on 699 male hypertensive patients who were hospitalization or had other complications. The Samir et al
. [
15] study was based on 114 civil servants with Grade I essential hypertension. The Huang et al
. [
29] study enrolled 101, 510 participants, a coal occupation group in labor-intensive enterprise, from 11 hospitals in the Kailuan community, which was most similar to our rural hypertensive patient populations.
On the other hand, BMI is not able to differentiate fat-free muscle from fat mass. Furthermore, BMI cannot account for sex and racial differences in fat content, and it is not able to differentiate the distribution of visceral and subcutaneous fat [
34]. The
phenomenon of the obesity paradox may be related to genetics, cardiorespiratory fitness, beneficial adipose tissue and weaker sympathetic activation [
34,
42,
43].
WHR, which is highly correlated with both increased visceral fat and low gluteal muscle mass [
43‐
45], appears to be a more reliable prognosticator of CVDs than BMI [
35,
36]. Previous studies found that a high WHR was strongly associated with increased AS based on PWV [
19,
25,
27]. The Whitehall II study, a prospective study of 10 308 civil servants, showed that standardized effects of central adiposity on aortic PWV increase was obvious and previous adiposity was associated with aortic stiffening independent of change in adiposity, glycaemia, and lipid levels across PWV assessments [
25]. We also demonstrated that WHR levels and central obesity were positively associated with increased AS or baPWV levels in Chinese rural adults with hypertension. Alexandre et al
. [
19] suggested that regional anthropometric indices including WHR were more closely correlated with PWV levels than BMI in hypertensive patients. Bouchi et al
. [
46], in a cross-sectional study with patients with diabetes and non-obese (normal BMI), noticed that increased visceral fat seems to be associated with increased AS based on baPWV. The lack of consistency between WHR and BMI may reflect that these measures identify different characteristics of obesity (central obesity in the case of WHR vs. subcutaneous/total fat in the case of BMI).
It is worth noting that eGFR was negatively associated with AS and baPWV in our study (Additional file
1: Table 1 and 3). Previous studies also showed that eGFR levels were reversely independently associated with cfPWV levels in patients with systemic lupus erythematosusa with a widely normally ranged eGFR levels (47). However, we cannot draw any causal relationship between eGFR levels and AS based on PWV in consideration of the cross-sectional analysis. Additionally, longitudinal studies indicated higher cfPWV levels were independently associated with steeper decline in eGFR levels and incident CKD in population more than 55 years old (48) and patients with type I diabetes (49). Higher cfPWV levels were also independently associated with the risk increased of progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD) in individuals with type II diabetes, and regression of PWV in the 3-year follow-up was associated with a lower risk of progressive CKD (50). With moderate progression of renal dysfunction and under well-controlled blood pressure during the 10-year follow-up period, peripheral AS based on baPWV but not central AS based on cfPWV was possibly one of the strongest predictors of CVD in patients with CKD stages III–V (51). These results suggest that AS based on PWV could be considered as a target for delaying decline in kidney function.
This study has several limitations. Firstly, this was a study of Chinese rural hypertensive patients and thus, the generalizability of the findings to other population remains to be determined. Secondly, the nutrional status such as the body shape might influence the measurement of baPWV causing information bias. Moreover, we cannot draw any causal relationship between the central obesity and AS based on baPWV considering the cross-sectional analysis. In the future, additional large-scale longitudinal studies are required to determine if weight loss programs reverse AS and reduce the risk of cardiovascular events.
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