TY - JOUR
T1 - Energy expenditure and obesity across the economic spectrum
AU - The IAEA DLW Database Consortium
AU - McGrosky, Amanda
AU - Luke, Amy
AU - Arab, Leonore
AU - Bedu-Addo, Kweku
AU - Bonomi, Alberto G.
AU - Bovet, Pascal
AU - Brage, Soren
AU - Buchowski, Maciej S.
AU - Butte, Nancy
AU - Camps, Stefan G.
AU - Casper, Regina
AU - Cummings, Daniel K.
AU - Das, Sai Krupa
AU - Deb, Sanjoy
AU - Dugas, Lara R.
AU - Ekelund, Ulf
AU - Forrester, Terrence
AU - Fudge, Barry W.
AU - Gillingham, Melanie
AU - Goris, Annelies H.
AU - Gurven, Michael
AU - Hambly, Catherine
AU - Joosen, Annemiek
AU - Katzmarzyk, Peter T.
AU - Kempen, Kitty P.
AU - Kraus, William E.
AU - Kriengsinyos, Wantanee
AU - Kuriyan, Rebecca
AU - Kushner, Robert F.
AU - Lambert, Estelle V.
AU - Larsson, Christel L.
AU - Leonard, William R.
AU - Lessan, Nader
AU - Löf, Marie
AU - Martin, Corby K.
AU - Medin, Anine C.
AU - Neuhouser, Marian L.
AU - Pietilainen, Kirsi H.
AU - Plasqui, Guy
AU - Prentice, Ross L.
AU - Racette, Susan B.
AU - Raichlen, David A.
AU - Ravussin, Eric
AU - Redman, Leanne
AU - Reynolds, Rebecca M.
AU - Rimm, Eric B.
AU - Roberts, Susan
AU - Rosinger, Asher Y.
AU - Samuels, Mary H.
AU - Sinha, Srishti
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 the Author(s).
PY - 2025/7/22
Y1 - 2025/7/22
N2 - Global economic development has been associated with an increased prevalence of obesity and related health problems. Increased caloric intake and reduced energy expenditure are both cited as development-related contributors to the obesity crisis, but their relative importance remains unresolved. Here, we examine energy expenditure and two measures of obesity (body fat percentage and body mass index, BMI) for 4,213 adults from 34 populations across six continents and a wide range of lifestyles and economies, including hunter-gatherer, pastoralist, farming, and industrialized populations. Economic development was positively associated with greater body mass, BMI, and body fat, but also with greater total, basal, and activity energy expenditure. Body size–adjusted total and basal energy expenditures both decreased approximately 6 to 11% with increasing economic development, but were highly variable among populations and did not correspond closely with lifestyle. Body size–adjusted total energy expenditure was negatively, but weakly, associated with measures of obesity, accounting for roughly one-tenth of the elevated body fat percentage and BMI associated with economic development. In contrast, estimated energy intake was greater in economically developed populations, and in populations with available data (n = 25), the percentage of ultraprocessed food in the diet was associated with body fat percentage, suggesting that dietary intake plays a far greater role than reduced energy expenditure in obesity related to economic development.
AB - Global economic development has been associated with an increased prevalence of obesity and related health problems. Increased caloric intake and reduced energy expenditure are both cited as development-related contributors to the obesity crisis, but their relative importance remains unresolved. Here, we examine energy expenditure and two measures of obesity (body fat percentage and body mass index, BMI) for 4,213 adults from 34 populations across six continents and a wide range of lifestyles and economies, including hunter-gatherer, pastoralist, farming, and industrialized populations. Economic development was positively associated with greater body mass, BMI, and body fat, but also with greater total, basal, and activity energy expenditure. Body size–adjusted total and basal energy expenditures both decreased approximately 6 to 11% with increasing economic development, but were highly variable among populations and did not correspond closely with lifestyle. Body size–adjusted total energy expenditure was negatively, but weakly, associated with measures of obesity, accounting for roughly one-tenth of the elevated body fat percentage and BMI associated with economic development. In contrast, estimated energy intake was greater in economically developed populations, and in populations with available data (n = 25), the percentage of ultraprocessed food in the diet was associated with body fat percentage, suggesting that dietary intake plays a far greater role than reduced energy expenditure in obesity related to economic development.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011676621
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011676621#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2420902122
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2420902122
M3 - Article
C2 - 40658837
AN - SCOPUS:105011676621
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 122
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 29
M1 - e2420902122
ER -