Abstract

This study tested the hypothesis that body mass index (BMI) is representative of body fatness independent of age, sex, and ethnicity. Between 1986 and 1992, the authors studied a total of 202 black and 504 white men and women who resided in or near New York City, were ages 20-94 years, and had BMIs of 18-35 kg/m2. Total body fat, expressed as a percentage of body weight (BF%), was assessed using a four-compartment body composition model that does not rely on assumptions known to be age, sex, or ethnicity dependent. Statistically significant age dependencies were observed in the BF%-BMI relations in all four sex and ethnic groups (p values < 0.05-0.001) with older persons showing a higher BF% compared with younger persons with comparable BMIs. Statistically significant sex effects were also observed in BF%-BMI relations within each ethnic group (p values < 0.001) after controlling first for age. For an equivalent BMI, women have significantly greater amounts of total body fat than do men throughout the entire adult life span. Ethnicity did not significantly influence the BF%-BMI relation after controlling first for age and sex even though both black women and men had longer appendicular bone lengths relative to stature (p values < 0.001 and 0.02, respectively) compared with white women and men. Body mass index alone accounted for 25% of between-individual differences in body fat percentage for the 706 total subjects; adding age and sex as independent variables to the regression model increased the variance (r2) to 67%. These results suggest that BMI is age and sex dependent when used as an indicator of body fatness, but that it is ethnicity independent in black and white adults.

Keywords

Body mass indexDemographyEthnic groupMedicineObesityBody fat percentageGerontologyInternal medicine

MeSH Terms

Adipose TissueAdultAge FactorsAgedAged80 and overAnthropometryBody CompositionBody Mass IndexCross-Sectional StudiesEthnicityFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedNew York CityRegression AnalysisSex Factors

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
1996
Type
article
Volume
143
Issue
3
Pages
228-239
Citations
1492
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1492
OpenAlex
61
Influential
1059
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Cite This

Dympna Gallagher, Marjolein Visser, Diana E. Sepúlveda et al. (1996). How Useful Is Body Mass Index for Comparison of Body Fatness across Age, Sex, and Ethnic Groups?. American Journal of Epidemiology , 143 (3) , 228-239. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a008733

Identifiers

DOI
10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a008733
PMID
8561156

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%