Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.

<h4>Background</h4>The applicability of the internationally advocated cut-off points of waist circumference (WC) derived from Caucasians to diagnose metabolic syndrome (MS) in HIV-infected Africans is unknown. This study aimed to determine the optimal WC cutoffs for MS diagnosis in HIV-i...

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Main Authors: Kim A Nguyen, Nasheeta Peer, Anniza de Villiers, Barbara Mukasa, Tandi E Matsha, Edward J Mills, Andre P Kengne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0183029&type=printable
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author Kim A Nguyen
Nasheeta Peer
Anniza de Villiers
Barbara Mukasa
Tandi E Matsha
Edward J Mills
Andre P Kengne
author_facet Kim A Nguyen
Nasheeta Peer
Anniza de Villiers
Barbara Mukasa
Tandi E Matsha
Edward J Mills
Andre P Kengne
author_sort Kim A Nguyen
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Background</h4>The applicability of the internationally advocated cut-off points of waist circumference (WC) derived from Caucasians to diagnose metabolic syndrome (MS) in HIV-infected Africans is unknown. This study aimed to determine the optimal WC cutoffs for MS diagnosis in HIV-infected people receiving care at public healthcare facilities in the Western Cape Province in South Africa.<h4>Methods</h4>Data from 748 randomly selected participants (591 women), with a median age of 38 years, were analysed. The Youden's index and the top-left-point approaches were used to determine the optimal cutoffs of WC for predicting ≥2 non-adipose MS components.<h4>Results</h4>The two approaches generated the same WC cut-off point in women, 92 cm (sensitivity 64%, specificity 64%) but different cut-off points in men: 87 cm (sensitivity 48%, specificity 85%) based on the Younden's index and 83 cm (sensitivity 59%, specificity 74%) by the top-left-point method. The advocated thresholds of 94 cm in men had low sensitivity (30%) but high specificity (92%) whereas 80 cm in women showed low specificity (32%) but high sensitivity (85%) for diagnosing MS in this sample. Most African-specific cut-off points performed well, with 90 cm providing acceptable performance in both men (sensitivity 43%, specificity 88%) and women (sensitivity 66%, specificity 59%).<h4>Conclusions</h4>This study underlines the sub-optimal performance of internationally recommended WC thresholds for MS diagnosis in HIV-infected Africans, and supports the need to revisit the guidelines on WC criterion in African population across the board. A single threshold of 90 cm for both genders would be a practical suggestion.
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spelling doaj-art-c464dce5f47b49b48745bc85243a0d182025-08-20T02:03:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01129e018302910.1371/journal.pone.0183029Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.Kim A NguyenNasheeta PeerAnniza de VilliersBarbara MukasaTandi E MatshaEdward J MillsAndre P Kengne<h4>Background</h4>The applicability of the internationally advocated cut-off points of waist circumference (WC) derived from Caucasians to diagnose metabolic syndrome (MS) in HIV-infected Africans is unknown. This study aimed to determine the optimal WC cutoffs for MS diagnosis in HIV-infected people receiving care at public healthcare facilities in the Western Cape Province in South Africa.<h4>Methods</h4>Data from 748 randomly selected participants (591 women), with a median age of 38 years, were analysed. The Youden's index and the top-left-point approaches were used to determine the optimal cutoffs of WC for predicting ≥2 non-adipose MS components.<h4>Results</h4>The two approaches generated the same WC cut-off point in women, 92 cm (sensitivity 64%, specificity 64%) but different cut-off points in men: 87 cm (sensitivity 48%, specificity 85%) based on the Younden's index and 83 cm (sensitivity 59%, specificity 74%) by the top-left-point method. The advocated thresholds of 94 cm in men had low sensitivity (30%) but high specificity (92%) whereas 80 cm in women showed low specificity (32%) but high sensitivity (85%) for diagnosing MS in this sample. Most African-specific cut-off points performed well, with 90 cm providing acceptable performance in both men (sensitivity 43%, specificity 88%) and women (sensitivity 66%, specificity 59%).<h4>Conclusions</h4>This study underlines the sub-optimal performance of internationally recommended WC thresholds for MS diagnosis in HIV-infected Africans, and supports the need to revisit the guidelines on WC criterion in African population across the board. A single threshold of 90 cm for both genders would be a practical suggestion.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0183029&type=printable
spellingShingle Kim A Nguyen
Nasheeta Peer
Anniza de Villiers
Barbara Mukasa
Tandi E Matsha
Edward J Mills
Andre P Kengne
Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.
PLoS ONE
title Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.
title_full Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.
title_fullStr Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.
title_full_unstemmed Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.
title_short Optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in African people living with HIV infection.
title_sort optimal waist circumference threshold for diagnosing metabolic syndrome in african people living with hiv infection
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0183029&type=printable
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