Our findings contrast with the only other study with prospectively measured BMI in both early and later life, which found that elevated body weight in adolescence exerted an effect on CHD after adjusting for adiposity in midlife. 4 In that study, there were considerably fewer deaths and therefore lower statistical power. In another prospective study, being overweight in college was associated with increased risk of future cardiovascular disease mortality, but no adjustment was made for subsequent BMI. 3 While the Harvard Alumni Health Study has several advantages-its sample size and number of end points, a range of collateral data, and repeated BMI measurements-it is not without its shortcomings. While there is growing evidence to suggest that body composition (eg, central adiposity) in middle and older age is associated with CHD, the only measurement of adiposity available to us was BMI. Furthermore, the present analyses are restricted to men; it is plausible, although perhaps unlikely, that different results may have been seen in women.In conclusion, the apparent doubling of future CHD risk in men who were obese in early adulthood was effectively eliminated following control for BMI in middle age. These results require replication in other studies.