2nd Edition of International Obesity and Metabolism Conference 2026

Speakers - IOMC2026

Shenghao Zuo - International Obesity and Metabolism Conference, Singapore

Shenghao Zuo

Shenghao Zuo

  • Designation: First Affiliated Hospital of Medical School, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China
  • Country: China
  • Title: Abdominal Obesity is a More Important Risk Phenotype for CKM Syndrome Than General Obesity: A Cross Sectional NHANES Study

Abstract

Background

Obesity is an upstream driver for the progression of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome risk. However, the associations of general or abdominal overweight/obesity with different risk stratifications of CKM syndrome remain unclear. This study examined the associations of distinct phenotypic patterns—isolated or coexisting general and abdominal overweight/obesity—with the risk of CKM syndrome.

Methods

This cross-sectional analysis used data from the NHANES 2005-2020 cycles. General and abdominal overweight/obesity were defined using race-specific BMI cut-offs and WHtR cut-offs (0.5/0.6), respectively, to construct four mutually exclusive exposure phenotypes. Multivariable logistic regression assessed associations with CKM syndrome.

Results

Among 18,099 adult participants, coexisting overweight significantly increased the risk of progression from the CKM low-risk to high-risk stage (OR=2.11,95% CI:1.58-2.80), from stage 2 to 3-4 combined (OR=1.04,95%CI:1.01-1.06), and from stage 2-to-3 (OR=1.02,95%CI:1.01-1.03). Abdominal obesity alone significantly increased the risk of progression from the CKM low-risk to high-risk stage (OR=1.73,95%CI:1.42-2.12), from stage 1-to-2 (OR=1.36,95%CI:1.02-1.79), from stage 2-to-3 (OR=1.05,95%CI:1.02-1.08), from stage 1 to 2-4 combined (OR=1.04,95%CI:1.02-1.07), and from stage 2 to 3-4 combined (OR=1.07,95%CI:1.04-1.10). In contrast, coexisting obesity did not further increase this risk. No type of overweight or obesity was significantly associated with the risk of progression from CKM stage 3-to-4. These associations were stronger in younger individuals, those living alone, and certain racial/ethnic groups.

Conclusion

Abdominal obesity is a more critical CKM risk phenotype than general obesity, and its associated risk begins to manifest as early as the overweight stage, with coexisting obesity conferring no significant additional CKM risk. Early identification and intervention targeting abdominal obesity are essential for preserving CKM health.