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More evidence of the health risks of normal weight obesity: the association with systemic inflammation

Rachel Liu‐Galvin, Frank A. Orlando, Aaron Saguil, Ara Jo, Kristy Smith, Andrew M. Miller, Danielle S. Nelson, Elizabeth Sanders, Arch G. Mainous

2025Frontiers in Medicine6 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Normal weight obesity (NWO) - a normal body mass index (BMI) with high body fat percentage (BF%) - has been linked to increased cardiometabolic risk. This study examined whether NWO is associated with systemic inflammation. Methods: Using 2017-2018 NHANES data, we categorized adult respondents aged 18-59 with BMI ≥ 18.5 into four groups:Reference: Normal BMI (18.5-24.9) with normal BF% (< 25% males/ < 35% females)NWO: Normal BMI with high BF% (≥ 25% males/ ≥ 35% females)Elevated BMI (≥ 25) with normal BF%Elevated BMI with high BF%Survey-weighted logistic regression examined associations with elevated hs-CRP (> 3.0 mg/L), adjusting for age and race/ethnicity. Sex-stratified analyses were also conducted. Results: Inflammation prevalence was 32.7% overall, highest among individuals with elevated BMI and high BF% (43.6%). Compared to the reference group, individuals with NWO had over 3-fold increased odds of inflammation [AOR 3.34 (95% CI: 1.83, 6.08)]; individuals with elevated BMI and high BF% had over 6-fold increased odds [AOR 6.19 (95% CI: 3.66, 10.50)]. Elevated BMI with normal BF% was not significantly associated with inflammation.In sex-stratified analyses, NWO was associated with inflammation in both males [AOR 4.44 (95% CI: 1.62, 12.10)] and females [AOR 2.78 (95% CI: 1.40, 5.52)]. Elevated BMI and high BF% was also associated with inflammation in both sexes. Conclusion: In this cross-sectional study, NWO was associated with inflammation, although causality cannot be inferred. Reliance on BMI alone may misclassify cardiometabolic risk therefore BF% should be considered in clinical assessments.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSystemic inflammationCausality (physics)InflammationInternal medicineObesityNormal weightAssociation (psychology)Risk factorRisk assessmentBody mass indexRelative riskBody weightDiseaseIntensive care medicineEpidemiologyMEDLINEBlood pressureMetabolic syndromeSystemic riskPhysiologyConfoundingAdipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic DiseasesCardiovascular Disease and AdiposityDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins
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