Waist circumference as a vital sign in clinical practice: a Consensus Statement from the IAS and ICCR Working Group on Visceral Obesity

Despite decades of unequivocal evidence that waist circumference provides both independent and additive information to BMI for predicting morbidity and risk of death, this measurement is not routinely obtained in clinical practice. This Consensus Statement proposes that measurements of waist circumf...

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Published inNature reviews. Endocrinology Vol. 16; no. 3; pp. 177 - 189
Main Authors Ross, Robert, Neeland, Ian J., Yamashita, Shizuya, Shai, Iris, Seidell, Jaap, Magni, Paolo, Santos, Raul D., Arsenault, Benoit, Cuevas, Ada, Hu, Frank B., Griffin, Bruce A., Zambon, Alberto, Barter, Philip, Fruchart, Jean-Charles, Eckel, Robert H., Matsuzawa, Yuji, Després, Jean-Pierre
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.03.2020
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Despite decades of unequivocal evidence that waist circumference provides both independent and additive information to BMI for predicting morbidity and risk of death, this measurement is not routinely obtained in clinical practice. This Consensus Statement proposes that measurements of waist circumference afford practitioners with an important opportunity to improve the management and health of patients. We argue that BMI alone is not sufficient to properly assess or manage the cardiometabolic risk associated with increased adiposity in adults and provide a thorough review of the evidence that will empower health practitioners and professional societies to routinely include waist circumference in the evaluation and management of patients with overweight or obesity. We recommend that decreases in waist circumference are a critically important treatment target for reducing adverse health risks for both men and women. Moreover, we describe evidence that clinically relevant reductions in waist circumference can be achieved by routine, moderate-intensity exercise and/or dietary interventions. We identify gaps in the knowledge, including the refinement of waist circumference threshold values for a given BMI category, to optimize obesity risk stratification across age, sex and ethnicity. We recommend that health professionals are trained to properly perform this simple measurement and consider it as an important ‘vital sign’ in clinical practice. In this Consensus Statement, the International Atherosclerosis Society and International Chair on Cardiometabolic Risk Working Group on Visceral Obesity recommend that waist circumference be included routinely as a measurement in clinical practice. They summarize the evidence that waist circumference and BMI together can provide improved assessments of cardiometabolic risk compared with either measurement alone.
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ISSN:1759-5029
1759-5037
DOI:10.1038/s41574-019-0310-7