Obesity reduces life expectancy by 5–20 years depending on severity, and accelerates biological aging through chronic inflammation, insulin resistance, and increased risk of at least 13 types of cancer.
Obesity (BMI ≥30) is associated with a 5–10 year reduction in life expectancy for moderate obesity and up to 20 years for severe obesity (BMI ≥45). It increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, at least 13 cancers, sleep apnoea, and osteoarthritis. Visceral adiposity — fat around the abdominal organs — is the most metabolically harmful form.
A 2014 study by Bhaskaran et al. in The Lancet, following 5.24 million UK adults, found a J-shaped relationship between BMI and mortality, with risk increasing steeply above a BMI of 25. A 2017 analysis in the NEJM, using pooled data from 239 prospective studies and 10.6 million participants, found that a BMI of 40–45 was associated with a 10-year reduction in life expectancy compared to a BMI of 22.5–25. Calle et al. (1999) in the NEJM demonstrated that obesity was associated with significantly higher cancer mortality, with the heaviest individuals having a 52% (men) and 62% (women) higher cancer death rate than those of normal weight. Visceral fat specifically drives insulin resistance, systemic inflammation (elevated IL-6, TNF-alpha, CRP), and dyslipidaemia.
"A BMI of 40–45 was associated with a 10-year reduction in life expectancy compared to a BMI of 22.5–25."
— GBD 2015 Obesity Collaborators, NEJM 2017
MedlinePlus and the NIH identify obesity as a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and cancer. The NIA recommends maintaining a healthy weight as a cornerstone of healthy ageing, noting that even modest weight loss (5–10% of body weight) produces meaningful improvements in blood pressure, blood glucose, and lipid profiles. The NIH National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute recommends a combination of reduced calorie intake, increased physical activity, and behavioural strategies for weight management.
Even modest weight loss produces disproportionate health benefits: a 5% reduction in body weight reduces blood pressure, improves insulin sensitivity, and reduces inflammatory markers. The most evidence-supported approach to sustained weight loss combines caloric restriction (a 500–750 kcal/day deficit), increased physical activity (particularly resistance training to preserve muscle mass), and behavioural strategies. For individuals with BMI ≥30 and metabolic comorbidities, GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide, tirzepatide) now have strong RCT evidence for both weight loss and cardiovascular risk reduction.
Vitaei verdict
Obesity is one of the most powerful modifiable determinants of longevity. Even modest weight reduction produces significant health benefits, and the evidence for intervention is Tier I.
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