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A proposed simplified definition of metabolic syndrome in children and adolescents: a global perspective

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-22, 03:50 authored by Xin’nan Zong, Roya Kelishadi, Hae Soon Kim, Peter Schwandt, Tandi E Matsha, Jose G Mill, Carmelo Antonio Caserta, Carla Campos Muniz Medeiros, Anastasios Kollias, Peter H Whincup, Lucia Pacifico, Abel López-Bermejo, Min Zhao, Miaobing ZhengMiaobing Zheng, Bo Xi
AbstractMetabolic syndrome (MetS) is becoming prevalent in the pediatric population. The existing pediatric MetS definitions (e.g., the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) definition and the modified National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) definition) involve complex cut-offs, precluding fast risk assessment in clinical practice.We proposed a simplified definition for assessing MetS risk in youths aged 6–17 years, and compared its performance with two existing widely used pediatric definitions (the IDF definition, and the NCEP definition) in 10 pediatric populations from 9 countries globally (n = 19,426) using the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses. In general, the total MetS prevalence of 6.2% based on the simplified definition was roughly halfway between that of 4.2% and 7.7% estimated from the IDF and NCEP definitions, respectively. The ROC curve analyses showed a good agreement between the simplified definition and two existing definitions: the total area under the curve (95% confidence interval) of the proposed simplified definition for identifying MetS risk achieved 0.91 (0.89–0.92) and 0.79 (0.78–0.81) when using the IDF or NCEP definition as the gold standard, respectively.The proposed simplified definition may be useful for pediatricians to quickly identify MetS risk and cardiometabolic risk factors (CMRFs) clustering in clinical practice, and allow direct comparison of pediatric MetS prevalence across different populations, facilitating consistent pediatric MetS risk monitoring and the development of evidence-based pediatric MetS prevention strategies globally.

History

Journal

BMC Medicine

Volume

22

Article number

190

Pagination

190-

Location

England

ISSN

1741-7015

eISSN

1741-7015

Language

en

Publication classification

C2 Other contribution to refereed journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC