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Article Abstract

Background And Aims: Metabolic syndrome is one of the greatest health threats in the modern world. Challenges associated with diagnostics and absence of a preventive strategy contribute to the evolution of metabolic syndrome towards central obesity and type 2 diabetes. Indicators such as body mass index (BMI) and body fat percentage (BF%) have limited clinical applications. Although anthropometrical indicators strongly correlate with risk of mortality, they have limited clinical applicability due to their inability to grade risk of cardiovascular and metabolic disease. We evaluated the ability of an anthropometry-based method, the Morphogram, that integrates body segment circumferences with validated cut-offs from the literature, to estimate body composition (BF% and lean mass percentage, LM%) and compute a score for metabolic syndrome risk (MSR). The aims of our study were (1) to assess the extent to which BF% and LM% measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) can be captured by Morphogram and (2) to propose a novel method to quantify the stage of MSR.

Methods: We tested 52 study participants (26 males, 26 females; age: 39.2 ± 8.4; BMI: 28.9 ± 2.6). We compared BF% and LM% estimated by Morphogram vs. DXA and the MSR score vs. health risks associated with DXA adiposity parameters and anthropometric variables. Morphogram is based on changes in body fat that occur at the waist, abdomen and hips, which correspond to approximately 90% of changes in total body fat. Therefore, we expected Morphogam to underestimate BF% relative to DXA while correctly estimating changes in central adiposity. We also hypothesized the MSR scores to exhibit stronger correlations with anthropometric variables than DXA parameters.

Results: BF% and LM% estimated by Morphogram (mean ± S.E.: 31.37 ± 1.09 % and 68.50 ± 1.08 %, respectively) significantly under-estimated and over-estimated BF% and LM%, estimated by DXA (34.68 ± 1.30 % and 65.41 ± 1.35 %, respectively; p < 0.001). The largest under-estimation discrepancies (≥-5 % of BF%) were caused primarily by excessive subcutaneous fat and relative fat-free mass deficits, in a subset of participants (35 %). Lastly, we found stronger correlations between MSR scores and risk factors that have been linked by epidemiological studies to anthropometric variables than adiposity parameters measured by DXA.

Conclusion: Morphogram has significant potential in the assessment of body composition in individuals with central adiposity and as a screening and monitoring tool of metabolic status. Therefore, Morphogram can be considered a clinically relevant approach for the prevention and monitoring of central adiposity and metabolic diseases.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clnesp.2025.06.013DOI Listing

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