| Literature DB >> 29902185 |
Anastasia V Pavlova1, Stella G Muthuri2, Rachel Cooper2, Fiona R Saunders1, Jennifer S Gregory1, Rebecca J Barr1,3, Kathryn R Martin1, Judith E Adams4, Diana Kuh2, Rebecca J Hardy2, Richard M Aspden1.
Abstract
This study investigated associations between measures of adiposity from age 36 and spine shape at 60-64 years. Thoracolumbar spine shape was characterised using statistical shape modelling on lateral dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry images of the spine from 1529 participants of the MRC National Survey of Health and Development, acquired at age 60-64. Associations of spine shape modes with: 1) contemporaneous measures of total and central adiposity (body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC)) and body composition (android:gynoid fat mass ratio and lean and fat mass indices, calculated as whole body (excluding the head) lean or fat mass (kg) divided by height2 (m)2); 2) changes in total and central adiposity between age 36 and 60-64 and 3) age at onset of overweight, were tested using linear regression models. Four modes described 79% of the total variance in spine shape. In men, greater lean mass index was associated with a larger lordosis whereas greater fat mass index was associated with straighter spines. Greater current BMI was associated with a more uneven curvature in men and with larger anterior-posterior (a-p) vertebral diameters in both sexes. Greater WC and fat mass index were also associated with a-p diameter in both sexes. There was no clear evidence that gains in BMI and WC during earlier stages of adulthood were associated with spine shape but younger onset of overweight was associated with a more uneven spine and greater a-p diameter. In conclusion, sagittal spine shapes had different associations with total and central adiposity; earlier onset of overweight and prior measures of WC were particularly important.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29902185 PMCID: PMC6002244 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of participants from the MRC National Survey of Health and Development with data on spine shape at age 60–64, stratified by sex.
| Variables | Males | Females | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | N | ||||
| Sex, N (%) | 740 | (48.4) | 789 | (51.6) | |
| Age at nurse visit (y); mean (SD) | 740 | 63.2 (1.17) | 789 | 63.3 (1.09) | .145 |
| 740 | 789 | ||||
| SM1 | -0.08 (0.97) | 0.07 (1.02) | .004 | ||
| SM2 | 0.01 (1.02) | -0.01 (0.99) | .59 | ||
| SM3 | -0.50 (0.97) | 0.47 (0.77) | < .001 | ||
| SM4 | 0.05 (0.97) | -0.04 (1.03) | .07 | ||
| 36y | 662 | 24.4 (2.86) | 725 | 22.9 (3.05) | < .001 |
| 43y | 693 | 25.3 (3.05) | 746 | 24.4 (3.67) | < .001 |
| 53y | 688 | 27.1 (3.63) | 762 | 26.5 (4.42) | .0124 |
| 60-64y | 739 | 27.7 (3.90) | 789 | 27.2 (4.62) | .0125 |
| 36y | 664 | 88.2 (8.33) | 726 | 75.1 (9.59) | < .001 |
| 43y | 689 | 90.4 (8.79) | 750 | 75.9 (8.77) | < .001 |
| 53y | 689 | 96.6 (9.68) | 765 | 83.5 (10.9) | < .001 |
| 60-64y | 738 | 100.2 (10.4) | 787 | 90.7 (11.5) | < .001 |
| Fat mass index (kg/m2) | 700 | 7.73 (2.27) | 744 | 10.8 (3.20) | < .001 |
| Lean mass index (kg/m2) | 700 | 17.5 (1.97) | 744 | 14.1 (1.76) | < .001 |
| Android: gynoid fat mass ratio | 732 | 0.65 (0.15) | 781 | 0.44 (0.12) | < .001 |
| 642 | 691 | < .001 | |||
| Never overweight | 122 (19.0) | 191 (27.6) | |||
| Overweight 36y | 259 (40.3) | 141 (20.4) | |||
| Overweight 43y | 109 (15.0) | 120 (17.4) | |||
| Overweight 53y | 105 (16.4) | 169 (24.5) | |||
| Overweight 60-64y | 47 (7.3) | 70 (10.1) | |||
BMI: Body Mass Index; SM: spine mode; DXA: Dual Energy X-Ray Absorptiometry
*comparison of sexes using student t-test or chi-square tests as appropriate
Fig 1The first four modes (SM1-SM4) produced by statistical shape modelling of the spine.
This describes how the shape changes when each mode is varied by two standard deviations in the negative (-2SD, red dashed line) and positive (+2SD, solid blue line) directions. Percentage of variance explained by each mode is shown in brackets.
Cross-sectional associations between BMI, WC and body composition and spine modes at age 60–64.
| Men, n = 698 | Women, n = 742 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Per 1SD increase | β (95%CI) | β (95%CI) | ||
| BMI | -0.004 (-0.08, 0.073) | .9 | -0.007 (-0.096, 0.082) | .9 |
| WC | 0.0003 (-0.076, 0.077) | .99 | 0.043 (-0.042, 0.128) | .3 |
| LMI | 0.198 (0.11, 0.286) | < .001 | -0.019 (-0.12, 0.082) | .7 |
| FMI | -0.18 (-0.27, -0.091) | < .001 | 0.015 (-0.091, 0.121) | .8 |
| AGFMR | -0.144 (-0.218, -0.071) | < .001 | -0.014 (-0.09, 0.061) | .7 |
| BMI | -0.084 (-0.162, -0.005) | .04 | -0.029 (-0.112, 0.055) | .5 |
| WC | -0.069 (-0.147, 0.009) | .08 | 0.013 (-0.067, 0.093) | .7 |
| LMI | -0.041 (-0.132, 0.05) | .4 | -0.001 (-0.096, 0.094) | .99 |
| FMI | -0.055 (-0.148, 0.037) | .2 | -0.023 (-0.123, 0.076) | .6 |
| AGFMR | -0.053 (-0.129, 0.022) | .2 | 0.028 (-0.043, 0.099) | .4 |
| BMI | -0.126 (-0.202, -0.051) | .001 | -0.114 (-0.18, -0.049) | .001 |
| WC | -0.125 (-0.2, -0.049) | .001 | -0.117 (-0.18, -0.055) | < .001 |
| LMI | -0.264 (-0.35, -0.177) | < .001 | -0.223 (-0.296, -0.149) | < .001 |
| FMI | 0.111 (0.023, 0.199) | .013 | 0.093 (0.016, 0.169) | .02 |
| AGFMR | 0.018 (-0.056, 0.092) | .6 | -0.02 (-0.076, 0.037) | .5 |
| BMI | 0.011 (-0.065, 0.087) | .8 | 0.085 (-0.003, 0.173) | .06 |
| WC | 0.02 (-0.056, 0.096) | .6 | 0.12 (0.036, 0.204) | .005 |
| LMI | 0.005 (-0.083, 0.094) | .9 | 0.089 (-0.011, 0.19) | .08 |
| FMI | 0.010 (-0.080, 0.100) | .8 | 0.007 (-0.098, 0.112) | .9 |
| AGFMR | -0.007 (-0.081, 0.066) | .8 | 0.085 (0.01, 0.16) | .03 |
(Analyses are restricted to those with data on BMI, WC, LMI, FMI, AGFMR and spine mode scores at age 60–64 (n = 1,440)
BMI: body mass index; WC: waist circumference; LMI: lean mass index; FMI: fat mass index; AGFMR; android (abdominal): gynoid (hip) fat mass ratio
¶ adjusted for each other
* sex interactions, P ≤.05
‡ non-linear relationship (LRT for quadratic term, P = 0.002) and overall LRT for trend across sex-specific quintiles for FMI (P = 0.0189)
Associations of gains in BMI and waist circumference during different age intervals with spine modes at age 60–64.
| Men | Women | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interval of BMI/ WC change (age (y)) | β (95%CI) | β (95%CI) | ||
| n = 606 | n = 682 | |||
| SM1 | ||||
| 36–43 | -0.083 (-0.166, -0.001) | .05 | 0.037 (-0.047, 0.121) | .4 |
| 43–53 | -0.038 (-0.119, 0.042) | .3 | -0.028 (-0.106, 0.05) | .5 |
| 53–60–64 | 0.047 (-0.036, 0.131) | .3 | -0.003 (-0.084, 0.078) | .9 |
| SM2 | ||||
| 36–43 | -0.043 (-0.126, 0.039) | .3 | -0.03 (-0.112, 0.053) | .5 |
| 43–53 | 0.042 (-0.038, 0.122) | .3 | 0.051 (-0.026, 0.127) | .2 |
| 53–60–64 | 0.041 (-0.042, 0.123) | .3 | -0.021 (-0.1, 0.058) | .6 |
| SM3 | ||||
| 36–43 | -0.009 (-0.09, 0.073) | .8 | 0.023 (-0.042, 0.087) | .5 |
| 43–53 | 0.092 (0.013, 0.171) | .02 | -0.003 (-0.062, 0.056) | .9 |
| 53–60–64 | 0.008 (-0.074, 0.09) | .8 | 0.021 (-0.041, 0.082) | .5 |
| SM4 | ||||
| 36–43 | -0.018 (-0.1, 0.065) | .7 | -0.006 (-0.092, 0.079) | .9 |
| 43–53 | -0.037 (-0.117, 0.043) | .4 | -0.03 (-0.109, 0.049) | .5 |
| 53–60–64 | -0.024 (-0.107, 0.059) | .6 | -0.017 (-0.099, 0.065) | .7 |
| n = 607 | n = 689 | |||
| SM1 | ||||
| 36–43 | -0.073 (-0.15, 0.005) | .07 | 0.066 (-0.014, 0.147) | .1 |
| 43–53 | -0.054 (-0.133, 0.025) | .2 | -0.004 (-0.078, 0.071) | .9 |
| 53–60–64 | 0.052 (-0.028, 0.132) | .2 | 0.051 (-0.027, 0.13) | .2 |
| SM2 | ||||
| 36–43 | -0.042 (-0.12, 0.036) | .3 | 0.03 (-0.049, 0.109) | .5 |
| 43–53 | 0.016 (-0.064, 0.096) | .7 | 0.006 (-0.067, 0.079) | .9 |
| 53–60–64 | 0.060 (-0.021, 0.141) | .1 | -0.003 (-0.08, 0.074) | .9 |
| SM3 | ||||
| 36–43 | 0.039 (-0.038, 0.115) | .3 | -0.087 (-0.148, -0.026) | .005 |
| 43–53 | 0.015 (-0.064, 0.093) | .7 | -0.023 (-0.079, 0.034) | .4 |
| 53–60–64 | -0.013 (-0.092, 0.066) | .7 | -0.023 (-0.083, 0.036) | .4 |
| SM4 | ||||
| 36–43 | 0.056 (-0.022, 0.134) | .2 | 0.058 (-0.023, 0.14) | .2 |
| 43–53 | -0.011 (-0.091, 0.069) | .8 | 0.021 (-0.055, 0.096) | .6 |
| 53–60–64 | -0.014 (-0.095, 0.066) | .7 | 0.013 (-0.067, 0.092) | .7 |
BMI, body mass index; WC, waist circumference
†Wald’s P-value
* sex interactions, p≤.05
aAssociation between BMI gain from 53 to 60-64y and SM1 was larger than the association from 36 – 43y, (Wald test P-value of the difference between the two coefficients = 0.03)
bAssociation between waist circumference gain from 53 to 60-64y and SM1 was larger than the association from 36 – 43y, (Wald test P-value of the difference between the two coefficients = 0.03)
Associations of age at first overweight with spine modes at age 60–64.
| SM1 | SM2 | SM3 | SM4 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| β (95%CI) | β (95%CI) | β (95%CI) | β (95%CI) | ||
| Overweight 36y | 0.027 (-0.182, 0.235) | -0.315 (-0.529, -0.101) | -0.277 (-0.484, -0.071) | 0.011 (-0.199, 0.220) | |
| Overweight 43y | 0.030 (-0.220, 0.280) | -0.287 (-0.544, -0.03) | -0.029 (-0.277, 0.219) | -0.078 (-0.329, 0.174) | |
| Overweight 53y | -0.088 (-0.341, 0.164) | 0.067 (-0.193, 0.326) | -0.114 (-0.365, 0.137) | -0.208 (-0.462, 0.046) | |
| Overweight 60-64y | 0.234 (-0.092, 0.559) | -0.02 (-0.354, 0.315) | 0.048 (-0.275, 0.372) | 0.126 (-0.202, 0.453) | |
| .7 | .002 | .024 | .4 | ||
| Overweight 36y | -0.038 (-0.26, 0.185) | -0.057 (-0.273, 0.159) | -0.262 (-0.428, -0.096) | 0.161 (-0.063, 0.385) | |
| Overweight 43y | -0.124 (-0.357, 0.109) | -0.153 (-0.38, 0.074) | -0.226 (-0.401, -0.051) | 0.123 (-0.112, 0.359) | |
| Overweight 53y | 0.020 (-0.192, 0.231) | 0.011 (-0.194, 0.217) | -0.064 (-0.222, 0.094) | 0.014 (-0.199, 0.228) | |
| Overweight 60-64y | -0.01 (-0.289, 0.27) | -0.008 (-0.28, 0.264) | 0.059 (-0.151, 0.268) | 0.008 (-0.274, 0.291) | |
| .96 | .98 | .003 | .9 | ||
| .5 | .3 | .6 | .4 | ||
| Overweight 36y | 0.116 (-0.178, 0.409) | -0.299 (-0.600, 0.003) | -0.184 (-0.475, 0.107) | -0.051 (-0.346, 0.244) | |
| Overweight 43 y | 0.089 (-0.196, 0.374) | -0.276 (-0.569, 0.016) | 0.033 (-0.250, 0.315) | -0.118 (-0.405, 0.168) | |
| Overweight 53y | -0.042 (-0.317, 0.233) | 0.075 (-0.207, 0.357) | -0.065 (-0.338, 0.208) | -0.240 (-0.517, 0.036) | |
| Overweight 60-64y | 0.270 (-0.067, 0.608) | -0.013 (-0.360, 0.333) | 0.087 (-0.247, 0.422) | 0.100 (-0.239, 0.439) | |
| .7 | .024 | .3 | .4 | ||
| Overweight 36y | -0.080 (-0.406, 0.247) | 0.036 (-0.282, 0.353) | -0.229 (-0.473, 0.016) | 0.139 (-0.190, 0.469) | |
| Overweight 43 y | -0.154 (-0.443, 0.135) | -0.087 (-0.368, 0.194) | -0.202 (-0.419, 0.014) | 0.107 (-0.184, 0.399) | |
| Overweight 53y | -0.003 (-0.249, 0.243) | 0.06 (-0.179, 0.299) | -0.046 (-0.231, 0.138) | 0.003 (-0.246, 0.252) | |
| Overweight 60-64y | -0.027 (-0.324, 0.270) | 0.03 (-0.258, 0.319) | 0.073 (-0.150, 0.295) | -0.001 (-0.301, 0.299) | |
| .9 | .7 | .08 | .6 | ||
| .5 | .3 | .6 | .5 | ||
†reference group: never overweight (BMI <25kg/m2)
**P-value for test of heterogeneity across groups when there was evidence of a deviation from a linear trend