OBJECTIVETo compare the relationship between adiposity and prevalent diabetes across ethnic groups in the UK Biobank cohort and to derive ethnic-specific obesity cutoffs that equate to those developed in white populations in terms of diabetes prevalence.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSUK Biobank recruited 502,682 U.K. residents aged 40-69 years. We used baseline data on the 490,288 participants from the four largest ethnic subgroups: 471,174 (96.1%) white, 9,631 (2.0%) South Asian, 7,949 (1.6%) black, and 1,534 (0.3%) Chinese. Regression models were developed for the association between anthropometric measures (BMI, waist circumference, percentage body fat, and waist-to-hip ratio) and prevalent diabetes, stratified by sex and adjusted for age, physical activity, socioeconomic status, and heart disease.
RESULTSNonwhite participants were two-to fourfold more likely to have diabetes. For the equivalent prevalence of diabetes at 30 kg/m 2 in white participants, BMI equated to the following: South Asians, 22.0 kg/m 2 ; black, 26.0 kg/m 2 ; Chinese women, 24.0 kg/m 2 ; and Chinese men, 26.0 kg/m 2 . Among women, a waist circumference of 88 cm in the white subgroup equated to the following: South Asians, 70 cm; black, 79 cm; and Chinese, 74 cm. Among men, a waist circumference of 102 cm equated to 79, 88, and 88 cm for South Asian, black, and Chinese participants, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS