New research from the U.S. shows that TMI is a better index than BMI in determining overweight in adolescents.

BMI during growth
In the earlier article on Monday about Body Mass Index, I already mentioned the caveats of using BMI as an indicator of the ratio between lean mass and fat mass. Moreover, BMI is merely a reference to a norm and the degree of deviation from it. The implications of a certain deviation depend on various circumstances. When using BMI, besides gender, you should take into account factors such as age and ethnicity. Particularly in still-growing adolescents, BMI appears to struggle with accurately estimating body fat. Researchers from the University of Alabama, Birmingham, therefore refer to challenging methods for correcting BMI for growing children [1]. Their research shows that even with these statistical corrections (use of percentiles or “Z scores”), BMI is less accurate than TMI.TMI Index?
I already mentioned it on Monday in the announcement of this article; TMI does not stand for a method to measure ‘corrected penis length’. I repeat it to save you the confusion of a Google search. T.M.I is the abbreviation of (Tri-)Ponderal Mass Index or also called Corpulence Index. In short: In the mid-19th century, a Belgian came up with the idea that dividing someone’s weight by their height squared could yield a good indicator of ‘relative body weight’. He named this index in 1832 after himself, the Quetelet Index[2]. Chances are that name doesn’t ring a bell to you. Quetelet’s best chance of eternal fame was ruined when in 1972 Ancel Keys decided to call this index ‘body mass index’ (BMI) [3]. Fifty years earlier, however, a Swiss thought there must be a better method. After all, what is better than dividing your weight by your height squared? Exactly, dividing by your height cubed. He also naturally named the new index after himself; Rohrer’s IndexTMI more suitable for measuring body fat in adolescents
The direct reason for this article is the findings from a new study from the U.S.[1] BMI would particularly struggle with still-growing children. In their study published in JAMA, the Britons demonstrated that TMI is a much better indication of body fat than BMI in the age range of 8 to 17 years. BMI would frequently misclassify children into the ‘overweight’ or ‘obese’ category. In many American school districts, this is also stated in a report. It also occurs in the Netherlands that children are weighed and measured at school to assess their BMI. The researchers compared data on body composition of 2285 white youths aged 8 to 29 who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between 1999 and 2004. They compared BMI with various indices and assessed the following points- stability with age
- accuracy in predicting percentage body fat
- accuracy in predicting overweight
References
- Courtney M. Peterson, Haiyan Su, Diana M. Thomas, Moonseong Heo, Amir H. Golnabi, Angelo Pietrobelli, Steven B. Heymsfield. Tri-Ponderal Mass Index vs Body Mass Index in Estimating Body Fat During Adolescence. JAMA Pediatrics, 2017; DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2017.0460
- Eknoyan, Garabed (2007). “Adolphe Quetelet (1796–1874)—the average man and indices of obesity”. Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. 23 (1): 47–51.
- Commentary: Origins and evolution of body mass index (BMI): continuing saga
- Babar, Sultan (March 2015). “Evaluating the Performance of 4 Indices in Determining Adiposity”. Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins). 25 (2): 183. Retrieved August 2015.
- Fayyaz, Jabeen (June 2005). “Ponderal Index”. Journal of Pakistan Medical Association.
- Lawrence F. Ditmier: New Developments in Obesity Research. Nova Science Publishers, Hauppauge, New York 2006, ISBN 1-60021-296-4[page needed]
- Davies, D. P. (1980). “Size at birth and growth in the first year of life of babies who are overweight and underweight at birth”. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society. 39 (1): 25–33. doi:10.1079/PNS19800005. PMID 6988835.
- ACC/SCN NUTRITION POLICY PAPER No. 19 – Glossary by Lindsay H. Allen and Stuart R. Gillespie