Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss

The goal was to study the prevalence of metabolically healthy obesity (MHO), the features of this phenotype compared with metabolically unhealthy obesity (MUHO), and the effect of weight loss on cardiometabolic risk factors in patients with MHO. Material and Methods — To assess the prevalence of MH...

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Main Authors: Еlena V. Ostrovskaya, Тatiana I. Romantsova, Andrei N. Gerasimov, Тamara E. Novoselova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Limited liability company «Science and Innovations» (Saratov) 2020-09-01
Series:Russian Open Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.romj.org/node/333
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spelling doaj-5f221ddb39bf4bffa493e31ea130030e2021-10-06T12:15:49ZengLimited liability company «Science and Innovations» (Saratov)Russian Open Medical Journal2304-34152020-09-0193e030110.15275/rusomj.2020.0301Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight lossЕlena V. OstrovskayaТatiana I. RomantsovaAndrei N. GerasimovТamara E. NovoselovaThe goal was to study the prevalence of metabolically healthy obesity (MHO), the features of this phenotype compared with metabolically unhealthy obesity (MUHO), and the effect of weight loss on cardiometabolic risk factors in patients with MHO. Material and Methods — To assess the prevalence of MHO, 389 case histories of obese patients aged 18-60 were analyzed. Three types of MHO criteria were used: 1) the definitions of metabolic syndrome (MS) according to International Diabetes Federation (IDF), 2005; 2) the HOMA-IR index (<2.7); 3) Biobank Standardisation and Harmonisation for Research Excellence in the European Union (BioSHaRE-EU) criteria, 2013. The study included comparative analysis of the medical history, anthropometry, basic metabolic parameters, and adipocytokine levels in 44 patients with MHO (taking into account the MS definitions) and 33 women with MUHO initially and with a decrease in body mass (BM) by ≥5% after 6 months. Results — The MHO prevalence was: according to the definitions of MS – 38.6%, according to HOMA-IR index – 34.5%, in BioSHaRE-EU – 9.6%. All indicators of anthropometry, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, including the HOMA-IR index, interleukin-6, and chemerin, as well as the duration of obesity in the MHO and MUHO groups significantly differed (p<0.05). After 6 months, MHO-patients who lost ≥5% BM from the initial value (63.6%) showed an increase of adiponectin, a decrease in waist circumference, HOMA-IR index, C-reactive protein (CRP), retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP-4), and chemerin (p<0.05). Conclusion — The MHO prevalence was maximal according to the MS definitions and minimal with BioSHaRE-EU criteria. The BM decrease in MHO is accompanied by a decrease in the content of proinflammatory adipocytokines and the HOMA-IR index, which determines the need to treat obesity regardless of the phenotype.http://www.romj.org/node/333metabolic syndromemetabolically healthy obesitycardiometabolic riskinsulin resistanceadipocytokines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Еlena V. Ostrovskaya
Тatiana I. Romantsova
Andrei N. Gerasimov
Тamara E. Novoselova
spellingShingle Еlena V. Ostrovskaya
Тatiana I. Romantsova
Andrei N. Gerasimov
Тamara E. Novoselova
Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss
Russian Open Medical Journal
metabolic syndrome
metabolically healthy obesity
cardiometabolic risk
insulin resistance
adipocytokines
author_facet Еlena V. Ostrovskaya
Тatiana I. Romantsova
Andrei N. Gerasimov
Тamara E. Novoselova
author_sort Еlena V. Ostrovskaya
title Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss
title_short Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss
title_full Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss
title_fullStr Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss
title_full_unstemmed Metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss
title_sort metabolically healthy obesity: prevalence, phenotype characteristic, effectiveness of weight loss
publisher Limited liability company «Science and Innovations» (Saratov)
series Russian Open Medical Journal
issn 2304-3415
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The goal was to study the prevalence of metabolically healthy obesity (MHO), the features of this phenotype compared with metabolically unhealthy obesity (MUHO), and the effect of weight loss on cardiometabolic risk factors in patients with MHO. Material and Methods — To assess the prevalence of MHO, 389 case histories of obese patients aged 18-60 were analyzed. Three types of MHO criteria were used: 1) the definitions of metabolic syndrome (MS) according to International Diabetes Federation (IDF), 2005; 2) the HOMA-IR index (<2.7); 3) Biobank Standardisation and Harmonisation for Research Excellence in the European Union (BioSHaRE-EU) criteria, 2013. The study included comparative analysis of the medical history, anthropometry, basic metabolic parameters, and adipocytokine levels in 44 patients with MHO (taking into account the MS definitions) and 33 women with MUHO initially and with a decrease in body mass (BM) by ≥5% after 6 months. Results — The MHO prevalence was: according to the definitions of MS – 38.6%, according to HOMA-IR index – 34.5%, in BioSHaRE-EU – 9.6%. All indicators of anthropometry, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, including the HOMA-IR index, interleukin-6, and chemerin, as well as the duration of obesity in the MHO and MUHO groups significantly differed (p<0.05). After 6 months, MHO-patients who lost ≥5% BM from the initial value (63.6%) showed an increase of adiponectin, a decrease in waist circumference, HOMA-IR index, C-reactive protein (CRP), retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP-4), and chemerin (p<0.05). Conclusion — The MHO prevalence was maximal according to the MS definitions and minimal with BioSHaRE-EU criteria. The BM decrease in MHO is accompanied by a decrease in the content of proinflammatory adipocytokines and the HOMA-IR index, which determines the need to treat obesity regardless of the phenotype.
topic metabolic syndrome
metabolically healthy obesity
cardiometabolic risk
insulin resistance
adipocytokines
url http://www.romj.org/node/333
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