Overweight, Obesity, and Mortality from Cancer in a Prospectively Studied Cohort of U.S. Adults
Abstract
The influence of excess body weight on the risk of death from cancer has not been fully characterized.
In a prospectively studied population of more than 900,000 U.S. adults (404,576 men and 495,477 women) who were free of cancer at enrollment in 1982, there were 57,145 deaths from cancer during 16 years of follow-up. We examined the relation in men and women between the body-mass index in 1982 and the risk of death from all cancers and from cancers at individual sites, while controlling for other risk factors in multivariate proportional-hazards models. We calculated the proportion of all deaths from cancer that was attributable to overweight and obesity in the U.S. population on the basis of risk estimates from the current study and national estimates of the prevalence of overweight and obesity in the U.S. adult population.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 115.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 60
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Overweight
- Body mass index
- Confidence interval
- Obesity
- Population
- Relative risk
- Demography
- Good health and well-being