Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Move beyond BMI to see obesity as a disease


 

REPORTING FROM AACE 2018

BOSTON – It’s time to move beyond body mass index and think about obesity as a chronic disease with complications that may need medical therapy, W. Timothy Garvey, MD, said.

“The term ‘obesity’ means so many things to different people,” Dr. Garvey explained in a video interview at the annual meeting of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists. “It doesn’t tell you what the impact is of excess adiposity on health.”

In fact, obesity meets the criteria needed to be defined as a disease, said Dr. Garvey, who coauthored a 2017 AACE position statement recommending a new diagnostic term for obesity: adiposity-based chronic disease, or ABCD.

“It’s not going to replace the general use of the term ‘obesity,’ of course; but for medical diagnosis, this term does tell you what we’re treating, and why we’re treating it,” noted Dr. Garvey, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Instead of relying on BMI [body mass index], the ABCD model emphasizes a “complications-centric” approach that drives therapeutic decisions, which may include medication.

“A structured lifestyle intervention is the key to therapy, but if we add medications on to any lifestyle intervention, we’re going to get more bang for the buck,” Dr. Garvey explained.

“We’re going to get more weight loss and be able to keep it off for a longer period of time,” he added. “We want that in situations in particular where the patient really has complications. This could be diabetes, it could be prediabetes, it could be obstructive sleep apnea, symptomatic osteoarthritis in the knees, stress incontinence, hypertension – any one of a number of weight-related complications that are really impairing health.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

Type 2 diabetes remitted with low-calorie diet
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
MyPlate as effective as calorie counting after 12 months
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Bariatric surgery comes with some risk of complications
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Risk of Diabetes Climbs Among Veterans
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Taking the Bite Out of Nutrition
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Bloating. Flatulence. Think SIBO
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
MDedge Daily News: Why low-calorie sucralose may fuel weight gain
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Being overweight as a child increases the risk of developing diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
MDedge Daily News: Physician burnout needs more than yoga
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Trends in teen consumption of sports drinks are up and down
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI