Respiratory Research (Feb 2023)

Longitudinal association between adiposity changes and lung function deterioration

  • Youngmok Park,
  • Jiyoung Kim,
  • Young Sam Kim,
  • Ah Young Leem,
  • Jinyeon Jo,
  • Kyungsoo Chung,
  • Moo Suk Park,
  • Sungho Won,
  • Ji Ye Jung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-023-02322-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background The longitudinal relationship between adiposity and lung function is controversial. We aimed to investigate the long-term association between adiposity changes and lung function in a middle-aged general Asian population. Methods In total, 5011 participants (average age, 54 years; 45% men) were enrolled from a community-based prospective cohort. During the follow-up period (median 8 years), both spirometry and bio-electrical impedance analysis were performed biannually. Individual slopes of the fat mass index (FMI; fat mass divided by the square of height in meters) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) were calculated using linear regression analysis. Multivariate linear mixed regression analysis was used to determine the long-term association between adiposity changes and lung function. Results The FMI was inversely associated with forced vital capacity (FVC) (estimated: − 31.8 mL in men, − 27.8 mL in women) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) (estimated: − 38.2 mL in men, − 17.8 mL in women) after adjusting for baseline age, height, residential area, smoking exposure (pack-years, men only), initial adiposity indices, and baseline lung function. The WHR was also inversely associated with FVC (estimated = − 1242.2 mL) and FEV1 (estimated = − 849.8 mL) in men. The WHR-increased group showed a more rapid decline in lung function than the WHR-decreased group in both the fat-gain and fat-loss groups. Conclusion Adiposity was associated with the long-term impairment of lung function. Central obesity was the main driver of lung function impairment in the middle-aged general Asian population, regardless of fat mass changes.

Keywords