Body mass indices (BMIs) are applied to monitor weight status and associated health risks in populations. Binary or multinomial logistic regression models are commonly applied in this context, but are only applicable to BMI values categorized within a small set of defined ad hoc BMI categories. This approach precludes comparisons with studies and models based on different categories. In addition, ad hoc categorization of BMI values prevents the estimation and analysis of the underlying continuous BMI distribution and leads to information loss. As an alternative to multinomial regression following ad hoc categorization, we propose a continuous outcome logistic regression model for the estimation of a continuous BMI distribution. Parameters of interest, such as odds ratios for specific categories, can be extracted from this model post hoc in a general way. A continuous BMI logistic regression that describes BMI distributions avoids the necessity of ad hoc and post hoc category choice and simplifies between-study comparisons and pooling of studies for joint analyses. The method was evaluated empirically using data from the Swiss Health Survey.
Continuous outcome logistic regression for analyzing body mass index distributions
T. Lohse,S. Rohrmann,D. Faeh,T. Hothorn
Published 2017 in F1000Research
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2017
- Venue
F1000Research
- Publication date
2017-11-01
- Fields of study
Mathematics, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- ad hoc bmi categories
Predefined BMI category cutoffs chosen for a specific analysis rather than derived from a continuous distribution model.
Aliases: ad hoc categorization of BMI values
- body mass index distribution
The underlying continuous distribution of BMI values in a population that the model aims to estimate.
Aliases: BMI distribution, body mass index (BMI) distribution
- continuous outcome logistic regression
A logistic regression model formulated to estimate a continuous BMI distribution rather than only a few predefined BMI groups.
Aliases: continuous BMI logistic regression
- multinomial logistic regression
A regression model for categorical outcomes used here as the standard approach based on BMI category labels.
- odds ratios
Effect measures for comparing the odds of belonging to specific BMI categories under the model.
- swiss health survey
The population health survey whose data were used to evaluate the method empirically.
REFERENCES
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