Comparison of Screening Tools

Key Points


Page: Go to Previous Page 1 of 13 Go to Next Page
  • WHO and EGIR clinical criteria rely mainly on insulin resistance. IDF criteria rely on abdominal obesity, while NCEP-ATP III gives equal weight to each clinical criterion of the metabolic syndrome.
  • The IDF and NCEP-ATP III approaches use the same cut-off values for lipids, fasting glucose, and blood pressure. However, the IDF has proposed ethnic-specific cut-offs for waist circumference. Waist circumference is also a mandatory IDF criterion.
  • A few prospective studies have compared metabolic syndrome criteria in assessing CVD risk. Although most criteria have a similar relationship to CVD risk, NCEP-ATP III criteria seem to have the strongest ties to CVD.
  • Independent of the clinical criteria studied, the metabolic syndrome better predicts type 2 diabetes risk than CVD risk.  
  • Further studies are needed to compare various metabolic syndrome clinical criteria using different statistical models and in all populations of the world.

Document Center


Role of the Dysregulated Endocannabinoid System in Determining Cardiometabolic Risk by Vincenzo Di Marzo, PhD

Role of the Dysregulated Endocannabinoid System in Determining Cardiometabolic Risk by Vincenzo Di Marzo, PhD

More

What is the role of low HDL cholesterol in the elevated CHD risk of metabolic syndrome patients? By Philip J. Barter, MBBS, FRACP, PhD

What is the role of low HDL cholesterol in the elevated CHD risk of metabolic syndrome patients? By Philip J. Barter, MBBS, FRACP, PhD

More

Waist circumference: Getting it right! By Robert Ross, PhD

Waist circumference: Getting it right! By Robert Ross, PhD

More

Hypertrophy and hyperplasia of abdominal adipose tissues in women. Int J Obes (Lond) 2008;32:283-91

Hypertrophy and hyperplasia of abdominal adipose tissues in women. Int J Obes (Lond) 2008;32:283-91

More

Schematic representation of how smoking might add to several mechanisms linking obesity to cardiovascular disease

Schematic representation of how smoking might add to several mechanisms linking obesity to cardiovascular disease

More