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. 2020 Jul 21;22(1):e13088. doi: 10.1111/obr.13088

TABLE 1.

Epidemiological evidence on the association between visceral obesity and incidence of specific types of cancer in adults and/or older adults

Author/year Design Population Outcome Visceral obesity measurement Visceral obesity results Summary
Overall cancer
Britton (2013) 6

Cohort

Framingham Heart Study (n = 3086, 49% women, mean age 50.2 years

Followed 5.0 years

Incident of cancer

Cancers were validated using medical records (pathology reports).

Nonmelanoma skin cancers were not included.

Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) by computed tomography (CT)

After adjustment for clinical risk factors and general adiposity/BMI.

VAT was associated with cancer

HR = 1.43 (1.12–1.84).

Women HR = 1.27 (0.88–1.82)

Men HR = 1.43 (1.06–1.94)

VAT

Overall—risk

Women—NS

Men—risk

Liu Y. (2016) 24

Cohort

68 253

Chinese women

Overall cancer

Major site‐specific cancers: postmenopausal breast cancer, endometrial, liver and ovarian

Waist‐hip ratio (WHR) WHR was not associated with cancer risk after adjustment.

WHR

Overall—NS

Lee (2018) 61

Cohort

22.9 million Korean adults

769 871 cancer cases

Followed 7 years

23 of the most common cancers WC—quintiles of the cohort

Positive association with 18 of 23 types of cancer varying by sex

Adjust for BMI removed some association (premenopausal and postmenopausal uterus and ovary, postmenopausal breast and leukaemia)

WC

Overall—risk

Women—risk

Men—risk

18 cancer—risk

Staunstrup (2019) 23

Prospective Epidemiological Risk Factor (PERF) cohort

4679 Danish postmenopausal women

Cancer diagnoses were extracted from the Danish Cancer Registry.

Overall cancer

Site specific cancers

Central obesity defined—trunk‐to‐peripheral fat ratio, calculated by fat mass in the trunk area/fat mass in arms and legs evaluate by dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry scanners

High central obese—quartile 4

Adjusted to BMI

Overall cancer HR = 1.50 (1.20–1.88)

Site‐specific cancers:

Respiratory (Q1 vs. Q4) HR = 2.01 (1.17–3.47)

Gastrointestinal (Q1 vs. Q4: HR = 1.55 (0.99–2.41)

Female genital organs (Q1 vs. Q4) HR = 1.95 (1.00–3.78)

Trunk‐to‐peripheral fat ratio

Overall—risk

Overall—NS (gastrointestinal)

Kyrgiou (2017) 16 Umbrella review of systematic reviews and meta‐analyses of observational studies

Colon cancer

Pancreatic

Breast premenopausal

Breast postmenopausal

Endometrial

Ovarian

Lung

Melanoma

Non‐Hodgkin lymphoma

Multiple myeloma

Leukaemia

Oesophageal adenocarcinoma

Gastric

Biliary tract

Thyroid

36 cancer sites and subtypes were examined.

Waist circumference (WC) per 10 cm

WHR per 0.1 units

Continuous scale to measure adiposity

Colon

WC HR = 1.25 (1.15–1.35)

WC men 1.33 (1.18–1.50)

WC women 1.16 (1.08–1.23)

WHR HR = 1.29 (1.17–1.43)

Men 1.43 (1.19–1.71)

Women 1.20 (1.08–1.33)

Pancreatic cancer

WC 1.11 (1.05–1.18)

WHR 1.20 (1.09–1.31)

Endometrial

WC 1.27 (1.17–1.39)

WHR 1.21 (1.13–1.29)

Ovarian

WC 1.06 (1.00–1.12)

WHR 1.00 (0.93–1.07)

All other sites are not associated.

WC

Overall—risk

Women—risk

Men—risk

WHR

Overall—risk

Women—risk

Men—risk

Ovarian and all other sites—NS

Colorectal cancer
Chan (2007) 28

Case–control

Patients in Hong Kong, China, recruited after coronary angiography for suspected CAD.

Age‐ and sex‐matched control was recruited from the general population (n = 207).

Colorectal neoplasm

Assessed by colonoscopy.

Advanced colonic lesion was defined as presence of cancer or adenomas.

WC

Men ≥ 91.4 cm

Women ≥ 81.3 cm

WC

OR = 2.29 (1.29–3.72)

WC

Overall—risk

Yamaji (2009) 25

Case–control study

50–79 years old

Screening in Tokyo, Japan

782 cases and 738 controls

Colorectal adenoma Visceral fat area (VFA)—cm2 by CT OR = 1.58 (1.11–2.24) for men and women combined, independently of body mass index.

VFA

Overall—risk

Knag (2010) 30

Case–control study

4276 subjects, Koreans that presented for health check‐ups

Colorectal adenoma

VAT by CT

Highest quintile vs. lowest quintile

WC male > 90 cm, female > 80 cm

VAT

Adjusted (OR) = 3.09 (2.19–4.36)

WC

Adjusted OR = 1.66 (1.38–1.99)

VAT

Overall—risk

WC

Overall—NS

Tae‐Hoon (2008) 29

Prospectively enrolled 200 asymptomatic adults, Seoul, Korea, 133 males, 67 females.

Mean age, 50.9

8.5 years follow‐up

Colorectal neoplasm

VAT by CT

136.61 cm2 versus VAT under 67.23 cm2

WC > 90 cm

After adjustment

VAT

OR = 4.07 (1.01–16.43)

WC

OR = 2.05 (0.63–6.70)

VAT

Overall—risk

WC

Overall—NS

Keum (2015) 26

Meta‐analysis of observational studies

12 studies included

2776 cases

Colorectal adenomas

VAT—each 25 cm2 increase

Range of VAT area = 30–228 cm2)

VAT

OR = 1.13 (1.05–1.21)

VAT

Overall—risk

Abar (2018) 27

Systematic review of prospective studies

50 936 cases among 7 393 510 participants

Colorectal cancer (CRC)

WC per 10 cm

WHR per 0.1 unit

WC

HR = 1.02 (1.02–1.03)

WHR

HR = 1.03 (1.01–1.05)

WC and WHR

Overall—risk

Prostate cancer
Blanc‐Lapierre (2015) 10

Population‐based case–control study

1937 men with incident prostate cancer, aged ≤75 years, diagnosed across hospitals, Montreal, Canada

1995 controls

The Prostate Cancer & Environment Study (PROtEuS)

Prostate cancer

Aggressiveness of PCa—defined by the Gleason score

WC cut‐off of 102 cm for abdominal obesity

Cases had similar WC (98.6 vs. 98.5 cm)

OR = 0.70 (0.60, 0.82) after considering potential confounders negative association did not vary according to PCa aggressiveness

WC

Overall—protective

Pischon (2008) 17

Cohort

29 502 men without cancer at baseline from eight countries of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)

Follow‐up of 8.5 years

Prostate cancer

WC per 5 cm

WHR per 0.1 unit

WC

RR advanced prostate cancer = 1.06 (1.01–1.1)

WHR

RR = 1.21 (1.04–1.39)

WC and WHR

Overall—risk

De Nunzio (2016) 18

584 clinic patients Italy

Patients with moderate/high cardiovascular risk evaluated for prostate cancer diagnosis.

Prostate cancer diagnosis at biopsy.

Secondary end point

High‐grade disease—Gleason score of ≥ 7

WC

Men > 102 cm

Women > 88 cm

WC was not associated with prostate cancer (p = 0.669).

WC was associated with Gleason score (p = 0.028).

Highest WC between Gleason score ≥ 7

WC

Overall—NS

Breast cancer
Agnoli (2010) 32

Case–control study postmenopausal women, ORDET cohort.

Follow‐up 13.5 years

Cases: 163 women

Four matched controls per case

Breast cancer postmenopausal WC > 86 cm

WC

Adjusted RR = 1.23 (0.83–1.81)

WC

Women—NS (post)

Agnoli (2015) 19

Case‐cohort study

22 494 women

593 breast cancer cases

EPIC—Italian centres European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition

Followed up 15 years

Breast cancer (BC)

Postmenopausal and premenopausal

WC > 80 cm

Whole cohort HR = 1.07(0.82–1.39)

Premenopausal 0.77 (0.51–1.16)

Postmenopausal 1.04 (0.69–1.57)

WC

Women—NS (pre and post)

Bandera (2015) 33

Case–control, AMBER Consortium, African American (AA) women

Cases:

2104 ER+,

1070 ER− cases (including 491 TN cases)

12 060 controls

Breast cancer

Premenopausal and postmenopausal

Categorized according to hormone receptor status ER+, ER− and TN (ER−, PR− and HER2−)

WHR

Premenopausal ER+ tumours

OR = 1.35 (1.01–1.80)

Postmenopausal all tumour subtypes combined

OR = 1.26 (1.02–1.56).

WHR

Women risk (pre and post)

Park (2017) 34

Cohort

Sister Study, nationwide prospective cohort

50 884 participants aged 35 to 74 years old

Breast cancer

Premenopausal and postmenopausal

WC (88 cm)

WHR (0.85)

Premenopausal with normal BMI

WC—NA

WHR

HR = 1.52 (0.89–2.61)

Postmenopausal with normal BMI

WC

HR = 1.58 (1.02–2.46)

WHR

HR = 1.38 (1.02–1.85)

Premenopausal with BMI ≥ 25 (overweight/obese)

WC

HR = 0.74 (0.54–1.01)

WHR

HR = 0.91 (0.62–1.33)

Postmenopausal with BMI ≥ 25

WC

HR = 1.43 (1.24–1.66)

WHR

HR = 1.49 (1.26–1.76)

Women

Normal BMI

WC and WHR—NS (pre)

WC and WHR—risk (post)

BMI ≥ 25

WC and WHR—NS (pre)

WC and WHR—risk (post)

Chen (2016) 11 Meta‐analysis of prospective studies

Breast cancer

Premenopausal and postmenopausal

WC per 10 cm

WHR per 0.1 unit

Premenopausal BC—adjusted RRs

WC

RR = 1.05 (0.99–1.10)

WHR

RR = 1.07 (0.95–1.21)

Postmenopausal BC

WC

RR = 1.06 (1.04–1.09)

WHR

RR = 1.06 (0.99–1.13)

Women

WC—risk (post)

WC—NS (pre)

WHR—NS (pre and post)

Endometrial cancer
Amankwah (2013) 38

Population‐based case–control study

524 cases

1032 controls

Alberta, Canada

Endometrial cancer

WC

HP

WHR

WC > 84.8–96.0

OR = 2.34 (1.59–3.43)

WC > 96.0

OR = 4.21 (2.90–6.10)

HP > 104.7–112.7

OR = 1.48 (1.03–2.11)

HP > 112.7

OR = 2.87 (2.05–4.00)

WHR > 0.81–0.86

OR = 1.86 (1.28–2.69)

WHR > 0.86

OR = 2.57 (1.80–3.67)

Women

WC—risk

HP—risk

WHR—risk

Reeves (2011) 35

Cohort

Women's Health Initiative

86 937 postmenopausal women

7.8 years of follow‐up

Endometrial cancer WHR

WHR

HR = 1.33 (1.04–1.70)

Women

WHR—risk

Sponholtz (2016) 37

Cohort

47 557 participants the Black Women's Health Study

Endometrial cancer

WC ≥ 88 cm

HC highest quartile

WHR ≥ 0.85

After adjustment

WC

RR = 1.09 (0.75–1.58)

HC

RR = 0.86 (0.55–1.36)

WHR

RR = 1.06 (0.79–1.42)

Women

WC—NS

HC—NS

WHR—NS

Aune (2015) 12

Systematic review and meta‐analysis of prospective studies

22 320 cases among

6 445 402 participants

Endometrial cancer

WC per 10 cm

HC 10‐cm increase

WHR per 0.1 unit

WC 1.27 (1.17–1.39)

HC 1.30 (1.19–1.41)

WHR 1.21 (1.13–1.29)

Women

WC—risk

HC—risk

WHR—risk

Raglan (2019) 36 Umbrella review analysed systematic reviews or meta‐analyses of observational studies Endometrial cancer WHR 0.1 unit

Premenopausal women

RR = 1.21 (1.13–1.29)

Women

WHR—risk

Pancreatic cancer
Luo (2008) 40

Cohort

138 503 women followed for 7.7 years

Women's Health Initiative in the United States

Pancreatic cancer

WC per 10 cm

WHR per 0.1 unit

WC 1.08 (0.98–1.18)

WHR 1.32 (1.12–1.56)

Women

WC—NS

WHR—risk

Genkinger (2011) 39

Analysis of 14 cohort studies on 846 340 individuals

2135 individuals were diagnosed with pancreatic cancer

Pancreatic cancer

WHR

Highest versus lowest quartile

RR = 1.35 (1.03–1.78)

Overall

WHR—risk

Aune (2012) 13 Systematic review and meta‐analysis of prospective studies Pancreatic cancer

WC 10‐cm increase

WHR 0.1‐unit increment

WC

RR = 1.11 (1.05–1.18)

WHR

RR = 1.19 (1.09–1.31).

Overall

WC—Risk

WHR—risk

Gastro‐oesophageal cancer
Du (2017) 14

Systematic review and meta‐analysis of prospective studies

Total of 2130 gastro‐oesophageal cancer cases diagnosed among 913 182 participants

Gastro‐oesophageal cancer: total gastro‐oesophageal cancer, gastric cancer and oesophageal cancer.

WC

WHR

Gastro‐oesophageal cancer

WC

RR = 1.68 (1.38–2.04)

WHR

RR = 1.49 (1.19–1.88)

Gastric cancer

WC

RR = 1.48 (1.24–1.78)

WHR

RR = 1.33 (1.04–1.70)

Oesophageal cancer

WC

RR 2.06 (1.30–3.24)

WHR

RR = 1.99 (1.05–3.75).

Overall

WC—risk

WHR—risk

Steffen (2015) 42

European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study

11 years of follow‐up

391 456 individuals

Oesophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC)

Gastric cardia adenocarcinoma (GCC)

Gastric noncardia adenocarcinoma (GNCC)

WC—highest versus lowest quintile

HC—highest versus lowest quintile

WHR—highest versus lowest quintile

EAC

Adjusted for BMI

WC

HR = 3.76 (1.72–8.22)

HC

HR = 0.35 (0.18–0.68)

WHR

HR = 4.05 (1.85–8.87)

GCC

WC (HR = 1.91 (1.09–3.37)

HC (HR = 0.38 (0.42–1.13)

WHR

HR = 1.95 (1.12–3.38)

GNCC

WC

HR = 1.25 (0.75–2.08)

HC

HR = 0.69 (0.41–1.15)

WHR

HR = 2.05 (1.19–3.52)

Overall

WC—risk

HC—protection

WHR—risk

O'Doherty (2012) 41

Prospective NIH–AARP cohort

218 854 participants

Oesophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC)

Gastric cardia adenocarcinoma (GCC)

WC

WHR

WC

EAC

HR = 2.01, CI 1.35–3.00

GCC

HR = 2.22, 1.43–3.47)

WHR

EAC

HR = 1.81, CI 1.24–2.64)

GCC not associated

Overall

WC—risk

WHR—risk (EAC)

WHR—NS (GC)

Renal cancer
Luo (2007) 15

Cohort Women's Health Initiative

7.7 years of follow‐up

140 057 postmenopausal women aged 50–79 years

Renal cell carcinoma WHR—highest vs. lowest quartile RR = 1.8 (1.2–2.5)

Women

WHR—risk

Pischon (2006) 43

European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)—eight countries

348 550 men and women

6.0 years of follow‐up

Renal cell carcinoma

WC

(≥102 cm in men; ≥88 in women)

HC quintile

WHR quintile

Multivariable adjustment

Women

WC RR = 1.80 (1.18–2.75)

HC RR = 1.65 (0.64–4.23)

WHR RR = 1.01 (0.54–1.89)

Men

WC RR = 1.19 (0.98–1.97)

HC RR = 0.44 (0.20–0.98)

WHR RR = 1.86 (0.97–3.56)

Women

WC—risk

HC—NS

WHR—NS

Men

WC—NS

HC—protective

WHR—NS

Nam (2019) 44

23 313 046 Korean adults

5.4 years of follow‐up, 18 036 cases

Kidney cancer

WC per 5 cm

WC male ≥ 100.0, female ≥ 95.0

HR increased with increasing waist circumference (WC) (p for trend < 0.001)

WC per 5 cm

Adjusted HR = 1.09 (1.08–1.11)

WC male ≥ 100.0, female ≥ 95.0

Adjusted HR = 1.18 (1.09–1.28)

Overall

WC—risk

Several types of cancer
Montella (2015) 20

Case–control study

Italy—hospital‐based

690 incident UCB

665 controls

Bladder cancer Urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (UCB)

WC

≥94 cm for men

≥80 cm for women

Bladder cancer

OR = 1.63 (1.22–2.19)

UCB

OR = 1.63 (1.22–2.19)

Overall

WC—risk

Britton (2008) 47

European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC), 371 983 cancer‐free individuals.

8.5 years of follow‐up, 1219 histologically confirmed incident cases

Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and multiple myeloma (MM)

WC ≥ 102 cm men, ≥88 cm women

WHR ≥ 0.95 men, ≥0.80 women

Sex‐specific analyses

Visceral obesity was not associated with NHL and MM in men and women.

Men—multivariate

WC

RR = 1.19 (0.91–1.56)

WHR

RR = 1.12 (0.91–1.36)

Women—multivariate

WC

RR = 0.98 (0.74–1.29)

WHR

RR = 0.93 (0.77–1.13)

Men

WC—NS

Women≥NS

Schlesinger (2013) 46

European Prospective

Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition study 359 525 men and women in the follow‐up of 8.6 years

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), intrahepatic (IBDC) extrahepatic bile duct system cancer (EBDSC including gallbladder cancer [GBC])

177 cases of HCC, 58 cases of IBDC and 210 cases of EBDSC, including 76 cases of GBC

WC and WHR—extreme tertiles

Waist‐to‐height ratio (WHtR)—extreme tertiles

All anthropometric measures were positively associated with risk of HCC and GBC.

WHtR

HCC

RR = 3.51 (2.09–5.87)

GBC

RR = 1.56 (1.12–2.16)

No association was observed between abdominal obesity and risk of IBDC and EBDSC.

Overall

WC—risk

WHtR—risk

WC and WHR—NS (IBDC and EBDSC)

Gaudet (2015) 49

20 cohort studies

Pooled data from 1 941 300 participants, including 3760 cases

Head and neck cancer

WC per 5 cm:

WHR per 0.1 unit

HC

After adjustment for BMI

WC

HR = 1.04 (1.03–1.05)

WHR

HR = 1.07 (1.05–1.09)

Larger HC was not associated.

Overall

WC—risk

WHR—risk

HC—NS

Kitahara (2016) 50 Pooled analysis of 22 prospective studies Thyroid cancer WC (per 5 cm) HR = 1.03 (1.01–1.05)

Overall

WC—risk

Aune (2015) 45 Systematic review and meta‐analysis of prospective studies Ovarian cancer

WC per 10 cm

HC

WHR

WC

RR = 1.06 (1.00–1.12)

HC and WHR—not association

Overall

WC—NS

HC—NS

WHR—NS

Hidayat (2016) 48 Meta‐analyses of observational studies Lung cancer

WC—10‐cm increase

WHR—0.1‐unit increase

WC

RR = 1.10 (1.04–1.17)

WHR

RR = 1.05 (1.00–1.11)

Highest versus lowest categories:

WC

RR = 1.32 (1.13–1.54)

WHR

RR = 1.10 (1.00–1.23)

WC

Never smokers RR = 1.11 (1.00–1.23)

Former smokers RR = 1.12 (1.03–1.22)

Current smokers RR = 1.16 (1.08–1.25)

Overall

WC—Risk

Abar (2019) 62 Meta‐analysis of prospective studies Lymphohaematopoietic cancers

WC

WHR

Higher WC—no associated with multiple myeloma

WHR associated with diffuse large β‐cell lymphoma

WC—NS

WHR—risk