Literature DB >> 24580759

Severe obesity in children: prevalence, persistence and relation to hypertension.

Joan C Lo1, Malini Chandra, Alan Sinaiko, Stephen R Daniels, Ronald J Prineas, Benjamin Maring, Emily D Parker, Nancy E Sherwood, Matthew F Daley, Elyse O Kharbanda, Kenneth F Adams, David J Magid, Patrick J O'Connor, Louise C Greenspan.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Newer approaches for classifying gradations of pediatric obesity by level of body mass index (BMI) percentage above the 95th percentile have recently been recommended in the management and tracking of obese children. Examining the prevalence and persistence of severe obesity using such methods along with the associations with other cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension is important for characterizing the clinical significance of severe obesity classification methods.
METHODS: This retrospective study was conducted in an integrated healthcare delivery system to characterize obesity and obesity severity in children and adolescents by level of body mass index (BMI) percentage above the 95th BMI percentile, to examine tracking of obesity status over 2-3 years, and to examine associations with blood pressure. Moderate obesity was defined by BMI 100-119% of the 95th percentile and severe obesity by BMI ≥120% × 95th percentile. Hypertension was defined by 3 consecutive blood pressures ≥95th percentile (for age, sex and height) on separate days and was examined in association with obesity severity.
RESULTS: Among 117,618 children aged 6-17 years with measured blood pressure and BMI at a well-child visit during 2007-2010, the prevalence of obesity was 17.9% overall and was highest among Hispanics (28.9%) and blacks (20.5%) for boys, and blacks (23.3%) and Hispanics (21.5%) for girls. Severe obesity prevalence was 5.6% overall and was highest in 12-17 year old Hispanic boys (10.6%) and black girls (9.5%). Subsequent BMI obtained 2-3 years later also demonstrated strong tracking of severe obesity. Stratification of BMI by percentage above the 95th BMI percentile was associated with a graded increase in the risk of hypertension, with severe obesity contributing to a 2.7-fold greater odds of hypertension compared to moderate obesity.
CONCLUSION: Severe obesity was found in 5.6% of this community-based pediatric population, varied by gender and race/ethnicity (highest among Hispanics and blacks) and showed strong evidence for persistence over several years. Increasing gradation of obesity was associated with higher risk for hypertension, with a nearly three-fold increased risk when comparing severe to moderate obesity, underscoring the heightened health risk associated with severe obesity in children and adolescents.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 24580759      PMCID: PMC3976673          DOI: 10.1186/1687-9856-2014-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Pediatr Endocrinol        ISSN: 1687-9848


Background

Data from U.S. population surveys demonstrate a significant increase in obesity prevalence among children age 2–19 years old, from 5.5% in 1976–1980 [1] to 16.9% in 2007–2010 [1,2], with obesity defined as body mass index (BMI) ≥95th percentile using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 2000 growth charts [3]. As obesity rates have climbed in all age groups [4-7], the prevalence of severe obesity has also risen, increasing from 1.1% to 5.1% in boys and 1.3% to 4.7% in girls from 1976–2006 [7]. Historically, severe obesity in children has been described in broad terms, with fewer studies examining gradations of obesity severity in relation to potentially adverse secondary complications. Methods for classifying extremely high BMI have evolved in the past decade, related in part to the limited utility of BMI percentiles and Z scores where contraction of values occurs at the upper range [8]. As an alternative, expressing BMI as a percentage of the 95th BMI percentile has been recommended for characterizing and tracking children with high BMI [9-11], where a threshold of BMI ≥120% of the 95th percentile has been used to define severe obesity [7,9-12]. New growth charts with additional growth curves representing higher order BMI as a percentage of the 95th percentile have also been recently published [10,11] and may allow for more precise stratification of risk among obese children. The present study conducted in a contemporary, diverse population of children followed in routine pediatric clinical care settings was designed with three specific aims. First, we characterized obesity severity by expressing BMI as a percentage of the 95th BMI percentile for age and sex. Second, we examined obesity status over 2–3 years follow-up, to determine tracking of both obesity and severe obesity in children and early adolescents. Third, we applied these new obesity stratification criteria to examine the association of obesity severity and hypertension as a potential indicator of the degree of cardiovascular health risk.

Methods

The Institutional Review Board at HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research approved the study with ceding of oversight authority by the KPNC Institutional Review Board. A waiver of informed consent was obtained due to the nature of the study. Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) is a large integrated healthcare delivery system providing comprehensive care for more than three million members annually. For this study, we examined data from a large retrospective multicenter study of pediatric hypertension [13], using a subcohort that included 117,936 children aged 6–17 years receiving care within three large KPNC subregions. Data pertaining to age, height, weight and blood pressure were obtained from the electronic medical record for the first (index) well child visit with measured height, weight and blood pressure between July 1, 2007 and December 31, 2010 as previously described [13]. Data for race/ethnicity, sex and membership were obtained from administrative databases. Height was measured by stadiometer and weight was measured on a calibrated scale as part of routine clinical care. Body mass index (BMI) was calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared (kg/m2), with percentiles calculated from the year 2000 CDC growth charts and reference datasets [14] to classify children as normal weight or underweight (BMI <85th BMI-for-age percentile); overweight (BMI 85th-94th (94.9) BMI-for-age percentile); or obese (BMI ≥95th BMI-for-age percentile) [3,4] as previously described [13,15]. For the purposes of this study, obese children were further classified based on BMI expressed as a percentage above the 95th BMI percentile according to age and sex [9,11], with a BMI 100-119% of the 95th percentile used to define moderate obesity and a BMI ≥120% of the 95th BMI percentile used to define severe obesity [7,9,12]. For children aged 6–13 years, a follow-up BMI was also examined when the child was 2–3 years older (available in 73.1% of subjects, requiring a minimum of 600 days between visits; 89.5% of follow-up visits were for well child care). To address potential BMI errors in the electronic medical record for the index visit, we first excluded those with height flagged as “biologically implausible” by the CDC program [16] and those with height <91.4 or >213.4 cm, weight <9.1 or >272.2 kg, or BMI <10 or >120 kg/m2. Next, 540 growth charts were manually reviewed if the index anthropometric data met any of the following criteria: (1) high values of weight or BMI flagged as “biologically implausible” by the CDC program [16] (except adolescents 12–17 years old with another BMI <5% different from the index value); (2) severely obese children with another height, weight or BMI differing by >15-20% per year within 2 years; and (3) obese children with subsequent non-obese BMI. Review of these outlying values resulted in the exclusion of 97 children with data errors. Blood pressure measurements were obtained using oscillometric devices as previously described [13], with levels classified according to the Fourth Report on the Diagnosis, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents [17]. Normal blood pressure was defined as a systolic and diastolic blood pressure <90th percentile, prehypertension was defined as a systolic or diastolic blood pressure between the 90th and <95th percentile (or blood pressure ≥120/80 mmHg for adolescents) and an elevated BP in the hypertension range was defined by a systolic or diastolic BP ≥95th percentile [17]. Among children and adolescents with an index (initial) elevated BP ≥95th percentile, hypertension was classified based on two additional consecutive BP measurements ≥95th percentile [17] or SBP ≥140 and/or DBP ≥90 mmHg for subsequent BP obtained at age ≥18 years and older (0.24% of the overall cohort) as previously described [13]. There were 730 (3.5% of the overall cohort) who did not have follow-up BP to allow final BP classification.

Statistical analysis

All analyses were conducted using SAS version 9.3 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Means with standard deviation and medians with interquartile range for continuous variables and proportions for categorical variables were computed. Differences between subgroups and classification methods were compared using the chi-square test for categorical variables and Student’s t-test for continuous variables. The trend in proportions across categories was examined using the Cochrane-Armitage test. Multivariable logistic regression was used to examine the independent relationship of obesity severity and elevated blood pressure, adjusting for differences in age, race/ethnicity and sex. These multivariable analyses, conducted in obese children, excluded 107 (0.5%) who received treatment with blood pressure lowering medication (the majority received clonidine or guanfacine, for presumably non-hypertensive indications) in the six months prior to the index well-child visit. A p-value of <0.05 was chosen as the criterion for statistical significance.

Results

The final study population consisted of 117,618 children and adolescents aged 6–17 years with measured height, weight and blood pressure at well child visits between July 1, 2007 and December 31, 2010. Half (49.5%) were female and 55.3% were age 12–17 years old. There was substantial racial and ethnic diversity, with 31.3% white, 8.8% black, 26.2% Hispanic, 21.0% Asian/Pacific Islander (PI) and the remainder of other or unknown race/ethnicity (12.8%). Overall, 17.9% met criteria for obesity defined by BMI ≥95th percentile, with a greater proportion among boys versus girls, and slightly greater among younger versus older age group (Table  1). Differences were also seen by race/ethnicity. Among boys, the highest prevalence of obesity was seen in Hispanics (28.9%), followed by blacks (20.5%), Asians (17.6%) and whites (15.6%, p < 0.001 for all comparisons). Among girls, the highest prevalence was seen in blacks (23.3%) followed by Hispanics (21.5%), whites (12.1%) and Asians (9.2%, p <0.01 for all comparisons). Figure  1 further compares prevalence findings by race/ethnicity within each age-sex subgroup. Overall, 5.6% of the cohort had severe obesity defined by BMI ≥120% of the 95th BMI percentile, with a greater proportion among boys compared to girls (6.6% vs. 4.5%, p < 0.001). The prevalence of severe obesity also varied by race/ethnicity, ranging from 3.5% in Asians and 3.8% in whites to 8.3% in blacks and 8.5% in Hispanics (p <0.001 for Asians and whites vs. blacks and Hispanics). When examined across age-sex subgroups (Figure  1), the prevalence of severe obesity was highest in Hispanic boys aged 6–11 (9.7%) and 12–17 (10.6%) years and Black girls aged 12–17 (9.5%) years. In multivariable analyses, increasing age, male sex (adjusted odds ratio OR 1.5, 95% confidence interval CI 1.5-1.6), Hispanic ethnicity (OR 2.4, 95% CI 2.2-2.5) and black race (OR 2.3, 95% CI 2.1-2.5) were independent predictors of severe obesity.
Table 1

Body mass index (BMI) classification by BMI percentile for children age 6–17 years old

  BMI < 5 th percentileBMI 5-84 th percentileBMI 85-94 th percentileBMI ≥ 95 th percentileBMI ≥ 120% times the 95 th percentile
OVERALL
117618
2679 (2.3%)
73630 (62.6%)
20296 (17.3%)
21013 (17.9%)
6532 (5.6%)
Race/ethnicity
 
 
 
 
 
 
 White
36793
892 (2.4%)
24859 (67.6%)
5941 (16.2%)
5101 (13.9%)
1401 (3.8%)
 Black
10306
150 (1.5%)
5921 (57.5%)
1980 (19.2%)
2255 (21.9%)
853 (8.3%)
 Hispanic
30821
447 (1.5%)
16609 (53.9%)
6001 (19.5%)
7764 (25.2%)
2618 (8.5%)
 Asian/PI
24701
828 (3.4%)
16753 (67.8%)
3789 (15.3%)
3331 (13.5%)
873 (3.5%)
 Other/unkn
14997
362 (2.4%)
9488 (63.3%)
2585 (17.2%)
2562 (17.1%)
787 (5.3%)
Age group
 
 
 
 
 
 
 6 – 11 yrs
52567
1325 (2.5%)
32619 (62.1%)
8897 (16.9%)
9726 (18.5%)
2773 (5.3%)
 12 – 17 yrs
65051
1354 (2.1%)
41011 (63.0%)
11399 (17.5%)
11287 (17.4%)
3759 (5.8%)
BOYS
59380
1432 (2.4%)
35870 (60.4%)
9924 (16.7%)
12154 (20.5%)
3935 (6.6%)
Race/ethnicity
 
 
 
 
 
 
 White
18488
503 (2.7%)
12262 (66.3%)
2843 (15.4%)
2880 (15.6%)
830 (4.5%)
 Black
5195
88 (1.7%)
3140 (60.4%)
902 (17.4%)
1065 (20.5%)
421 (8.1%)
 Hispanic
15507
230 (1.5%)
7983 (51.5%)
2819 (18.2%)
4475 (28.9%)
1580 (10.2%)
 Asian/PI
12661
417 (3.3%)
7967 (62.9%)
2049 (16.2%)
2228 (17.6%)
613 (4.8%)
 Other/unkn
7529
194 (2.6%)
4518 (60.0%)
1311 (17.4%)
1506 (20.0%)
491 (6.5%)
Age group
 
 
 
 
 
 
 6 – 11 yrs
26977
633 (2.4%)
16075 (59.6%)
4607 (17.1%)
5662 (21.0%)
1702 (6.3%)
 12 – 17 yrs
32403
799 (2.5%)
19795 (61.1%)
5317 (16.4%)
6492 (20.0%)
2233 (6.9%)
GIRLS
58238
1247 (2.1%)
37760 (64.8%)
10372 (17.8%)
8859 (15.2%)
2597 (4.5%)
Race/ethnicity
 
 
 
 
 
 
 White
18305
389 (2.1%)
12597 (68.8%)
3098 (16.9%)
2221 (12.1%)
571 (3.1%)
 Black
5111
62 (1.2%)
2781 (54.4%)
1078 (21.1%)
1190 (23.3%)
432 (8.5%)
 Hispanic
15314
217 (1.4%)
8626 (56.3%)
3182 (20.8%)
3289 (21.5%)
1038 (6.8%)
 Asian/PI
12040
411 (3.4%)
8786 (73.0%)
1740 (14.5%)
1103 (9.2%)
260 (2.2%)
 Other/unkn
7468
168 (2.3%)
4970 (66.6%)
1274 (17.1%)
1056 (14.1%)
296 (4.0%)
Age group
 
 
 
 
 
 
  6 – 11 yrs
25590
692 (2.7%)
16544 (64.7%)
4290 (16.8%)
4064 (15.9%)
1071 (4.2%)
  12 – 17 yrs32648555 (1.7%)21216 (65.0%)6082 (18.6%)4795 (14.7%)1526 (4.7%)

Numbers represent row percentages; yrs= years; unkn= unknown.

Figure 1

The proportion of children and adolescents with moderate and severe obesity by age, sex and race/ethnicity. Comparisons by race/ethnicity within each age-sex group showed that the prevalence of obesity (BMI ≥95th percentile) was significantly different between all racial/ethnic subgroups (p < 0.01) except for differences in obesity prevalence for black vs Asian 6–11 year old boys (p = 0.90), black vs. Hispanic 6–11 year old girls (p = 0.64), and white vs. Asian 12–17 year old boys (p = 0.37). The prevalence of severe obesity (BMI ≥120% of the 95th percentile) was also significantly different between all racial/ethnic subgroups (p < 0.01), except for white vs. Asian (p = 0.06) and black vs. Hispanic 6–11 year old girls (p = 0.96), and white vs. Asian 12–17 year old boys (p = 0.58).

Body mass index (BMI) classification by BMI percentile for children age 6–17 years old Numbers represent row percentages; yrs= years; unkn= unknown. The proportion of children and adolescents with moderate and severe obesity by age, sex and race/ethnicity. Comparisons by race/ethnicity within each age-sex group showed that the prevalence of obesity (BMI ≥95th percentile) was significantly different between all racial/ethnic subgroups (p < 0.01) except for differences in obesity prevalence for black vs Asian 6–11 year old boys (p = 0.90), black vs. Hispanic 6–11 year old girls (p = 0.64), and white vs. Asian 12–17 year old boys (p = 0.37). The prevalence of severe obesity (BMI ≥120% of the 95th percentile) was also significantly different between all racial/ethnic subgroups (p < 0.01), except for white vs. Asian (p = 0.06) and black vs. Hispanic 6–11 year old girls (p = 0.96), and white vs. Asian 12–17 year old boys (p = 0.58). Table  2 shows the proportion of children within each BMI percentage category above the 95th percentile, by age and sex. For the 21,013 obese children (BMI ≥95th percentile), nearly one third were severely obese (BMI ≥120% of the 95th percentile). Half of severely obese youth had BMI 120-129% of the 95th percentile and the remainder were evenly distributed across BMI 130-139% and BMI ≥140% of the 95th percentile. The remaining two thirds of obese children met criteria for moderate obesity (BMI 100-119% of the 95th percentile). For both boys and girls with BMI ≥95th percentile, a greater proportion of older compared to younger children met criteria for severe obesity (p < 0.05 comparing age 6–11 vs. 12–17 years old).
Table 2

Characteristics of obese children and adolescents based on percentage of the 95 percentile for body mass index (BMI)

 Overall N = 21,013100-109% × 95 th percentile110-119% × 95 th percentile≥ 120% × 95 th percentile120-129% × 95 th percentile130-139% × 95 th percentile≥ 140% × 95 th percentile
OVERALL
21,013
8923 (42.5%)
5558 (26.5%)
6532 (31.1%)
3172 (15.1%)
1701 (8.1%)
1659 (7.9%)
Age group
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 6 – 11 yrs
9726
4314 (44.4%)
2639 (27.1%)
2773 (28.5%)
1486 (15.3%)
702 (7.2%)
585 (6.0%)
 12 – 17 yrs
11287
4609 (40.8%)
2919 (25.9%)
3759 (33.3%)
1686 (14.9%)
999 (8.9%)
1074 (9.5%)
BMI, mean ± SD
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Age 6 – 11 yrs
25.1 ± 3.7
22.7 ± 2.0
25.0 ± 2.1
29.0 ± 3.7
27.1 ± 2.2
29.4 ± 2.5
33.4 ± 4.2
 Age 12 – 17 yrs
31.9 ± 4.9
28.4 ± 1.7
31.0 ± 1.9
36.9 ± 4.8
33.7 ± 2.0
36.5 ± 2.1
42.3 ± 5.0
BOYS
12154
5032 (41.4%)
3187 (26.2%)
3935 (32.4%)
1946 (16.0%)
1015 (8.4%)
974 (8.0%)
Age group
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 6 – 11 yrs
5662
2449 (43.3%)
1511 (26.7%)
1702 (30.1%)
910 (16.1%)
426 (7.5%)
366 (6.5%)
 12 – 17 yrs
6492
2583 (39.8%)
1676 (25.8%)
2233 (34.4%)
1036 (16.0%)
589 (9.1%)
608 (9.4%)
BMI, mean ± SD
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Age 6 – 11 yrs
24.9 ± 3.6
22.4 ± 1.9
24.7 ± 2.0
28.6 ± 3.6
26.7 ± 2.1
29.0 ± 2.3
32.7 ± 4.1
 Age 12 – 17 yrs
31.4 ± 4.6
27.8 ± 1.5
30.4 ± 1.7
36.1 ± 4.5
33.2 ± 1.8
35.9 ± 2.0
41.5 ± 4.5
GIRLS
8859
3891 (43.9%)
2371 (26.8%)
2597 (29.3%)
1226 (13.8%)
686 (7.7%)
685 (7.7%)
Age group
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 6 – 11 yrs
4064
1865 (45.9%)
1128 (27.8%)
1071 (26.4%)
576 (14.2%)
276 (6.8%)
219 (5.4%)
 12 – 17 yrs
4795
2026 (42.3%)
1243 (25.9%)
1526 (31.8%)
650 (13.6%)
410 (8.6%)
466 (9.7%)
BMI, mean ± SD
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Age 6 – 11 yrs
25.5 ± 3.8
23.1 ± 2.1
25.5 ± 2.2
29.7 ± 3.9
27.7 ± 2.4
30.1 ± 2.6
34.4 ± 4.2
 Age 12 – 17 yrs32.6 ± 5.029.0 ± 1.731.8 ± 1.938. ± 5.134.7 ± 1.937.4 ± 2.143.4 ± 5.5

Numbers represent row percentages.

Characteristics of obese children and adolescents based on percentage of the 95 percentile for body mass index (BMI) Numbers represent row percentages. There was a strong tendency for obese children to remain in an obese BMI category over the follow-up period of this study. Follow-up analyses conducted using data from 80,697 children age 6–13 years old at the index visit and 2–3 years older at the time of subsequent BMI measurement (median 2.3 years, interquartile range 2.1-2.8 years after the index visit) demonstrated that 71.9% of children with severe obesity continued to be severely obese (with an even greater proportion among younger children) and an additional 24.7% remained obese but their BMI declined to the moderately obese range (Figure  2D). Among moderately obese children, 10.5% became severely obese (14.1% for children ages 6–7) while 57.1% remained moderately obese and 26.6% became overweight but not obese (Figure  2C). Less than one fifth (15.3%) of overweight children became moderately obese, while half (51.2%) remained overweight and one third (33.2%) had follow-up BMI in the normal range (Figure  2B).
Figure 2

Follow-up BMI category based on BMI percentile and BMI percentage of the 95percentile by age and BMI at the index visit. (A) For children with normal BMI at the index visit (N = 50,685), an increasing proportion of younger children were overweight at 2–3 years of follow-up (p < 0.001 comparing 6–7 and 8–9 year olds to 12–13 year olds, with no differences between 10–11 and 12–13 year olds, p = 0.6). (B) For children who were overweight at the index visit (N = 14,057), an increasing proportion of younger children were obese at follow-up (p <0.001, test for trend). (C) For children who were moderately obese at the index visit (BMI 100-119% of the 95th percentile, N = 9848), an increasing proportion of younger children were obese at follow-up (p <0.001, test for trend). The proportions of moderately obese children who remained obese at follow-up were significantly different between all age groups (p <0.01) except for 10–11 year olds compared to 12–13 year olds. (D) For children who were severely obese at the index visit (N = 4295), nearly all were obese or severely obese at follow-up (95.7-99.3%). Children in the youngest age group (6–7 years old) had the highest prevalence of severe obesity at follow-up compared to other age groups (p <0.05). Differences between the older age groups were not significantly different.

Follow-up BMI category based on BMI percentile and BMI percentage of the 95percentile by age and BMI at the index visit. (A) For children with normal BMI at the index visit (N = 50,685), an increasing proportion of younger children were overweight at 2–3 years of follow-up (p < 0.001 comparing 6–7 and 8–9 year olds to 12–13 year olds, with no differences between 10–11 and 12–13 year olds, p = 0.6). (B) For children who were overweight at the index visit (N = 14,057), an increasing proportion of younger children were obese at follow-up (p <0.001, test for trend). (C) For children who were moderately obese at the index visit (BMI 100-119% of the 95th percentile, N = 9848), an increasing proportion of younger children were obese at follow-up (p <0.001, test for trend). The proportions of moderately obese children who remained obese at follow-up were significantly different between all age groups (p <0.01) except for 10–11 year olds compared to 12–13 year olds. (D) For children who were severely obese at the index visit (N = 4295), nearly all were obese or severely obese at follow-up (95.7-99.3%). Children in the youngest age group (6–7 years old) had the highest prevalence of severe obesity at follow-up compared to other age groups (p <0.05). Differences between the older age groups were not significantly different. Among obese children, we also examined whether there was a graded relationship between increasing BMI percentage above the 95th percentile and elevated blood pressure. As shown in Table  3, the proportion of children with normal blood pressure fell while those with prehypertension or hypertension increased as BMI percentage increased above the 95th percentile. Adjusting for differences in age, sex and race/ethnicity, a significant graded relationship between obesity severity and hypertension remained, with the adjusted odds of hypertension increasing across increasing BMI strata: OR 1.5 (CI 0.9-2.3) for BMI 110-119%, OR 1.8 (CI 1.1-3.0) for BMI 120-129%, OR 3.5 (CI 2.1-5.8) for BMI 130-139%, and OR 5.7 (CI 3.6-8.9) for BMI ≥140% of the 95th BMI percentile, compared to BMI 100-109% of the 95th BMI percentile. Severe obesity (BMI ≥120% of the 95th BMI percentile) was associated with a 2.7-fold increased odds of hypertension compared to those with moderate obesity (BMI 100-119% of the 95th percentile; adjusted OR 2.7, CI 2.0-3.7). These results were similar when restricting analyses to the subset of 11,705 obese children and adolescents who had three consecutive BP measurements (data not shown).
Table 3

Blood pressure in obese children and adolescents classified based on percentage of the 95 percentile for body mass index (BMI)

BMI > 95 th percentileNormal blood pressure (BP)
Prehypertension
BP ≥95 th percentile *
Confirmed hypertension
Adjusted odds of hypertension
N = 12802N = 5308N = 2796N = 166OR (95% CI)
100-109% × 95th percentile
5976 (67.2%)
2012 (22.6%)
903 (10.2%)
40 (0.5%)
-
110-119% × 95th percentile
3478 (62.9%)
1390 (25.2%)
659 (11.9%)
36 (0.7%)
1.5 (0.9 – 2.3)
120-129% × 95th percentile
1789 (56.8%)
866 (27.5%)
497 (15.8%)
24 (0.8%)
1.8 (1.1 – 3.0)
130-139% × 95th percentile
837 (49.5%)
515 (30.5%)
339 (20.1%)
26 (1.5%)
3.5 (2.1 – 5.8)
≥140% × 95th percentile722 (43.9%)525 (31.9%)398 (24.2%)40 (2.4%)5.7 (3.6 – 8.9)

row percentages.

*For those with an index BP ≥95th percentile, up to 3 consecutive measurements were used to assign final BP status. Hypertension was defined by 3 consecutive BP ≥95th percentile (or SBP ≥140 mmHg and/or DBP ≥90 mmHg for subsequent BP at age ≥18 years of age). Within this subgroup, there were 1900 (67.9%) children and adolescents with repeat BP <95th percentile and 730 (26.1%) with no subsequent BP available for final assignment.

†Odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), adjusted for differences in age, sex and race/ethnicity.

Blood pressure in obese children and adolescents classified based on percentage of the 95 percentile for body mass index (BMI) row percentages. *For those with an index BP ≥95th percentile, up to 3 consecutive measurements were used to assign final BP status. Hypertension was defined by 3 consecutive BP ≥95th percentile (or SBP ≥140 mmHg and/or DBP ≥90 mmHg for subsequent BP at age ≥18 years of age). Within this subgroup, there were 1900 (67.9%) children and adolescents with repeat BP <95th percentile and 730 (26.1%) with no subsequent BP available for final assignment. †Odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), adjusted for differences in age, sex and race/ethnicity.

Discussion

This study extends results from previously published studies of pediatric obesity by examining gradations in severe obesity by gender, age and race/ethnicity. In addition, we evaluated the persistence of obesity and obesity severity over 2–3 years, as well as the association between obesity severity and hypertension. Severe obesity was found in 5.6% of children and adolescents age 6–17 years old, with prevalence highest among children of Hispanic ethnicity or black race, similar to findings for overall obesity (BMI ≥95th percentile). National data [7] and other racially and ethnically diverse cohorts [12] also demonstrate a disproportionately higher prevalence of severe obesity in Hispanic boys and non-Hispanic black girls. Furthermore, longitudinal data on BMI tracking from more than 80,000 children and adolescents included within this study cohort (of whom 9848 were moderately obese and 4295 severely obese at the index visit) demonstrate that severely obese children tend to maintain the same degree of obesity over time, particularly when evident at a young age. These findings support data from other longitudinal pediatric cohorts documenting a strong tracking effect of elevated BMI in childhood, as well as into adulthood [18-23]. Similar shifts in BMI across normal, overweight, obese and severely obese categories were also observed in a multisite school-based study of 3993 U.S. sixth graders re-examined later in eigth grade, where 76% of severely obese youths (alternatively defined by the 99th BMI percentile) remained severely obese after 2.5 years of follow-up [24]. While previous findings from this source cohort demonstrated that pediatric obesity was significantly related to an increased prevalence of hypertension [13], in this study we applied new obesity stratification criteria and found that the risk of hypertension increased as the degree of obesity increased, with a nearly three-fold greater risk of hypertension among severely obese children compared to moderately obese children. These findings are consistent with the known interrelationship of adiposity, hypertension and cardiometabolic factors in children [5,25-29], supporting evidence of greater risk with extreme or severe obesity [5,30-32], and further quantify the association between obesity severity and hypertension as a representation of cardiovascular health risk. The persistence of severe obesity in longitudinal analyses, supporting data from other pediatric studies examining longitudinal shifts in BMI category among smaller population cohorts [24], also documents an ongoing highly significant adverse cardiovascular impact and emphasizes the need for early weight loss management. These data have several clinical and public health implications. First, consistent with recently published concensus statements emphasizing the importance of identifying and tracking severe obesity in children and adolescents [10], current approaches to classifying obesity in the clinical setting should be refined at the higher end of the BMI spectrum to more precisely identify those with severe obesity. Categorization based strictly on BMI percentiles does not adequately stratify risk within the extreme BMI range (>99th percentile). In addition, conventional growth charts have a BMI limit of 36–37 kg/m2, which is problematic for tracking of weight status in adolescents with extremely high BMI [11]. In this study, we found that classifying obesity severity based on BMI percentage of the 95th percentile, as previously proposed by others [9,11], has the advantage of more precisely categorizing extremely obese individuals for both clinical tracking and research purposes. More importantly, our data demonstrate that this new obesity classification system results in clinically relevant thresholds of higher order obesity associated with graded health risk, as defined by hypertension. Several factors may constrain the interpretation of our data. First, these data were limited to a subset of children receiving well-child care in a northern California healthcare delivery system and thus may not be fully representative of other population demographics or regions. Second, there is the theoretical possibility that growth chart reference data may differ by age, with implications for examining longitudinal trends. However, our BMI thresholds focus on well-established reference data for the 85th and 95th BMI percentiles thresholds, deriving higher order obesity based on the 95th percentile rather than the 97th or 99th BMI percentiles. Third, while we believe the measurements of BP in these subjects were accurate, assessment of BP in extremely obese children is a challenge due to limitations in cuff size [26,33,34]. Finally, we limited our cardiovascular risk assessment to blood pressure, since lipid measurements were not uniformly available to further estimate cardiovascular risk in addition to blood pressure. As such, we believe that the previously documented tracking effect for blood pressure in this age range to adulthood [17] supports the use of hypertension as an important component of overall cardiovascular risk. In summary, among the substantial number of children with obesity (BMI at or above the 95th percentile), identifying subsets of those with more extreme obesity is of clinical importance. Stratification of obesity by percentage above the 95th BMI percentile shows a graded increased risk of hypertension and may be related to increased risk of other cardiovascular risk factors such as dyslipidemia and prediabetes. A more refined and precise classification of severe pediatric obesity using contemporary criteria [10] may serve to improve clinical practice, tracking, as well as public health surveillance, and facilitate research on the best approaches to managing cardiovascular risk in these subgroups of varying obesity severity.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

JL, SD, AS and LG conceptualized and designed the study. MC conducted the data analyses. JL, LG, BM, AS and RP drafted the initial manuscript. All authors (JL, MC, AS, SD, RP, BM, EP, NS, MD, EK, KA, DM, PO, LG) provided critical input on data analysis and interpretation, revised the manuscript for important intellectual content and approved the final version.
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2.  Changes in terminology for childhood overweight and obesity.

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3.  Prevalence and trends of severe obesity among US children and adolescents.

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4.  Race, childhood insulin, childhood caloric intake, and class 3 obesity at age 24: 14-year prospective study of schoolgirls.

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5.  Morbidly obese diagnosis as an indicator of cardiovascular disease risk in children: results from the CARDIAC Project.

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6.  Intensified effect of adiposity on blood pressure in overweight and obese children.

Authors:  Wanzhu Tu; George J Eckert; Linda A DiMeglio; Zhangsheng Yu; Jeesun Jung; J Howard Pratt
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7.  Blood pressure measurement in children: the importance of cuff bladder size.

Authors:  P H Whincup; D G Cook; A G Shaper
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  1989-10       Impact factor: 4.844

8.  Body mass index and waist-to-height changes during teen years in girls are influenced by childhood body mass index.

Authors:  Frank M Biro; Bin Huang; John A Morrison; Paul S Horn; Steven R Daniels
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  2009-08-18       Impact factor: 5.012

9.  Prevalence of obesity and trends in body mass index among US children and adolescents, 1999-2010.

Authors:  Cynthia L Ogden; Margaret D Carroll; Brian K Kit; Katherine M Flegal
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2012-01-17       Impact factor: 56.272

10.  Prevalence of obesity and extreme obesity in children aged 3-5 years.

Authors:  J C Lo; B Maring; M Chandra; S R Daniels; A Sinaiko; M F Daley; N E Sherwood; E O Kharbanda; E D Parker; K F Adams; R J Prineas; D J Magid; P J O'Connor; L C Greenspan
Journal:  Pediatr Obes       Date:  2013-05-15       Impact factor: 4.000

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1.  Longitudinal changes in BMI z-scores among 45 414 2-4-year olds with severe obesity.

Authors:  David S Freedman; Nancy F Butte; Elsie M Taveras; Alyson B Goodman; Heidi M Blanck
Journal:  Ann Hum Biol       Date:  2017-10-30       Impact factor: 1.533

2.  The Effects of Interrupting Sitting Time on Affect and State Anxiety in Children of Healthy Weight and Overweight: A Randomized Crossover Trial.

Authors:  Jennifer Zink; David A Berrigan; Miranda M Broadney; Faizah Shareef; Alexia Papachristopoulou; Sheila M Brady; Shanna B Bernstein; Robert J Brychta; Jacob D Hattenbach; Ira L Tigner; Amber B Courville; Bart E Drinkard; Kevin P Smith; Douglas R Rosing; Pamela L Wolters; Kong Y Chen; Jack A Yanovski; Britni R Belcher
Journal:  Pediatr Exerc Sci       Date:  2020-03-12       Impact factor: 2.333

3.  Too Little, but Still Great?

Authors:  Omavi Bailey; Sairam Parthasarathy; Daniel Combs
Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med       Date:  2018-06-15       Impact factor: 4.062

Review 4.  Management of Hypertension in Children and Adolescents.

Authors:  Joshua Samuels; Cynthia Bell; Joyce Samuel; Rita Swinford
Journal:  Curr Cardiol Rep       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 2.931

5.  Childhood socioeconomic hardship, family conflict, and young adult hypertension: The Santiago Longitudinal Study.

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Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2020-04-01       Impact factor: 4.634

6.  Prevalence of Severe Obesity among Primary School Children in 21 European Countries.

Authors:  Angela Spinelli; Marta Buoncristiano; Viktoria Anna Kovacs; Agneta Yngve; Igor Spiroski; Galina Obreja; Gregor Starc; Napoleón Pérez; Ana Isabel Rito; Marie Kunešová; Victoria Farrugia Sant'Angelo; Jørgen Meisfjord; Ingunn Holden Bergh; Cecily Kelleher; Nazan Yardim; Iveta Pudule; Ausra Petrauskiene; Vesselka Duleva; Agneta Sjöberg; Andrea Gualtieri; Maria Hassapidou; Jolanda Hyska; Genc Burazeri; Constanta Huidumac Petrescu; Mirjam Heinen; Hajnalka Takacs; Hana Zamrazilová; Tulay Bagci Bosi; Elena Sacchini; Ioannis Pagkalos; Alexandra Cucu; Paola Nardone; Paul Gately; Julianne Williams; João Breda
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Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2017-04-10       Impact factor: 7.124

8.  Trends in relative weight over 1 year in low-income urban youth.

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Review 9.  Working toward precision medicine approaches to treat severe obesity in adolescents: report of an NIH workshop.

Authors:  Aaron S Kelly; Marsha D Marcus; Jack A Yanovski; Susan Z Yanovski; Stavroula K Osganian
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10.  Developing an Algorithm to Detect Early Childhood Obesity in Two Tertiary Pediatric Medical Centers.

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Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2016-07-20       Impact factor: 2.342

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