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Assessment of a proposed BMI formula in predicting body fat percentage among Filipino young adults

Medicine and Health

Assessment of a proposed BMI formula in predicting body fat percentage among Filipino young adults

M. V. Haute, E. Rondilla, et al.

This study reveals how a modified BMI formula excels at predicting body fat percentage and identifying overweight or obesity in Filipino young adults. Researchers Michael Van Haute, Emer Rondilla, Jasmine Lorraine Vitug, and others explore the promising outcomes of using advanced quadratic models over traditional methods, paving the way for improved health diagnostics.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Body mass index (BMI), while routinely used in evaluating adiposity, cannot distinguish between fat and lean mass, and thus can misclassify weight status particularly among athletic, physically active, and tall- and short-statured individuals, whose lean-to-fat ratios and body proportions vary considerably from average individuals. Believing that the traditional BMI formula divides weight by too much with short people and by too little with tall people, University of Oxford professor L. N. Trefethen proposed a modified formula in computing BMI. This study was conducted among a sample of Filipino young adults (n = 190) to assess the performance of the modified BMI formula against the traditional one in: (1) predicting body fat percentage (%BF) measured using bioelectric impedance analysis, and (2) diagnosing overweight/obesity. Using robust polynomial regression analysis (covariates: age, waist circumference, smoking history and alcohol intake), the BMI quadratic models had the highest adjusted R^2 and the lowest AIC and BIC for both sexes compared to the linear models. The AuROCs of the traditional BMI were higher than those of the proposed BMI, albeit nonsignificant. In conclusion, both traditional and modified BMIs significantly predicted %BF, as well as adequately discriminated between %BF-defined normal and overweight-obese states using optimal BMI cutoff values.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Dec 15, 2020
Authors
Michael Van Haute, Emer Rondilla, Jasmine Lorraine Vitug, Kristelle Diane Batin, Romaia Elaiza Abrugar, Francis Quitoriano, Kryzia Dela Merced, Trizha Maaño, Jojomaku Higa, Jianna Gayle Almoro, Darlene Ternida, J. T. Cabrera
Tags
BMI
body fat percentage
overweight
obesity
Filipino young adults
polynomial regression
health diagnostics
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