2026-07-01 インペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドン(ICL)

<関連情報>
- https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/articles/2026/cholesterol-and-blood-pressure-drugs-cut-heart-risk-for-over-40s-with-obesity/
- https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00758-0/fulltext
先進国における肥満および正常BMIの代謝特性:各国の人口ベース研究の多国間分析 Metabolic traits in obesity and normal BMI in industrialised countries: a multi-country analysis of national population-based studies
NCD Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC)
The Lancet Published:Published July 1, 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(26)00758-0
Summary
Background
Effective treatments are available for obesity and for hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia, which mediate the cardiovascular and renal effects of obesity. Our aim was to compare blood pressure, cholesterol, and the use of antihypertensive and lipid-lowering medicines in people with obesity and normal weight and assess whether the BMI-associated excess risk has diminished.
Methods
Our primary outcomes were mean systolic blood pressure (SBP), non-HDL cholesterol and HDL cholesterol, and the proportion of the participants who used antihypertensive and lipid-lowering medicines. We used data from 110 health surveys conducted from 1990 to 2024 with 978 425 participants aged 20–79 years sampled from national populations of seven countries: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Finland, England, and the USA. We used graphical presentation and trend analysis to evaluate changes over time in these outcomes in participants in the normal BMI range (20·0 to <25·0 kg/m2), and changes in the difference between participants with obesity (separately for class I obesity [30·0 to <35·0 kg/m2] and class II and III obesity [BMI ≥35·0 kg/m2]) or overweight (25·0 to <30·0 kg/m2) and those in the normal BMI range.
Findings
Mean non-HDL cholesterol and SBP declined over time, especially among those older than 40 years, with the notable exception of some sex–age groups in Thailand. When pooled across all countries, age groups, and obesity and overweight BMI ranges, the difference in mean non-HDL cholesterol with normal BMI became smaller by –0·05 mmol/L per decade (95% CI –0·07 to –0·03) for females and –0·07 mmol/L per decade (–0·09 to –0·05) for males. For SBP, the pooled estimate of change in the difference with normal BMI across all countries, age groups, and obesity and overweight BMI ranges was –0·7 mmHg per decade (95% CI –1·0 to –0·4) for females and –0·6 mmHg per decade (–0·9 to –0·4) for males. The declines were larger in individuals with obesity, especially class II and III obesity, than in normal BMI, leading to a convergence of these risk factors between obesity and normal BMI in people older than 40 years. As a result of these trends, in England, the USA, Thailand, South Korea, and Japan, older people with obesity often became indistinguishable from, or better off than, those with normal BMI in terms of non-HDL cholesterol and SBP. These trends accompanied a larger increase in the use of lipid-lowering and antihypertensive medicines in middle-aged and older people with obesity than in those with normal BMI. The pooled estimate for the increase in difference in lipid-lowering medicines compared with normal BMI across all countries, age groups, and obesity and overweight BMI ranges was 1·5 percentage points per decade (1·0–2·1) for females and 1·6 percentage points per decade (1·0–2·2) for males. For antihypertensive medicines, the pooled estimate was 0·7 percentage points per decade (0·3–1·0) for females and 2·0 percentage points per decade (1·3–2·8) for males. Mean HDL cholesterol increased more in people with normal BMI than those with obesity, leading to a divergence. For people younger than 40 years, there has been little change in the gap between those with obesity or overweight and those with normal BMI; young adults were rarely treated for high cholesterol or blood pressure regardless of their BMI.
Interpretation
In industrialised countries, blood pressure and non-HDL cholesterol in older adults with obesity are increasingly similar to those with normal BMI, with higher use of antihypertensive and lipid-lowering medicines a possible driver of this convergence. There is nonetheless heterogeneity across countries in the extent of convergence. Young adults with obesity remain metabolically at higher risk than their counterparts with normal weight.
Funding
UK Medical Research Council and UK Research and Innovation (Innovate UK).
