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Table 2 Relationships between obesity indices and renal function indicators through Spearman correlation analyses

From: The new visceral adiposity index outperforms traditional obesity indices as a predictor of subclinical renal damage in Chinese individuals: a cross-sectional study

Obesity indices

eGFR

uACR

rs

95% CI

P value

rs

95% CI

P value

BMI

-0.067

-0.108, -0.023

0.001

0.181

0.142, 0.220

 < 0.001

WC

-0.053

-0.094, -0.012

0.011

0.145

0.105, 0.183

 < 0.001

VAI

-0.093

-0.131, -0.053

 < 0.001

0.129

0.090, 0.167

 < 0.001

CVAI

-0.103

-0.144, -0.063

 < 0.001

0.129

0.092, 0.168

 < 0.001

NVAI

-0.094

-0.133, -0.055

 < 0.001

0.174

0.135, 0.214

 < 0.001

LAP

-0.094

-0.133, -0.053

 < 0.001

0.174

0.136, 0.215

 < 0.001

METS-VF

-0.061

-0.103, -0.020

0.003

0.161

0.124, 0.201

 < 0.001

ABSI

0.041

0.000, 0.079

0.046

0.084

0.045, 0.123

 < 0.001

  1. ABSI A body shape index, BMI Body mass index, CVAI Chinese visceral adiposity index, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, LAP Lipid accumulation product, METS-VF Metabolic score for visceral fat, NVAI New visceral adiposity index, uACR urinary albumin creatinine ratio, VAI Visceral adiposity index, WC Waist circumference