We examined data on body weight and height from 55 male and 26 female lung cancer cases and up to 10 sex-ethnicity-age matched controls per case from a large prospective cohort. All four body mass indices (W/H, W/H2, W/H3 and W/H(P)) were highly correlated. Conditional logistic regression, using each index as the exposure variable, yielded odds ratios for lung cancer with magnitude and dose-response gradient that were somewhat different among the four indices. These results suggest that the body mass indices are not necessarily interchangeable in measuring obesity-disease associations.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, J., & Kolonel, L. N. (1984). Are body mass indices interchangeable in measuring obesity-disease associations? American Journal of Public Health, 74(4), 376–377. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.74.4.376
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