This study aimed to describe the distribution of waist-to-height ratio
(WHtR) percentiles and cutoffs for obesity in Brazilian adolescents. A
cross-sectional study including adolescents aged 10 to 15 years was
conducted in the city of S\ue3o Paulo, Brazil; anthropometric
measurements (weight, height, and waistcircumference) were taken, and
WHtRs were calculated and then divided into percentiles derived by
using Least Median of Squares (LMS) regression. The receiver operating
characteristic (ROC) curve was used in determining cutoffs for obesity
(BMI 6597th percentile) and Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests
were used for comparing variables. The study included 8,019 adolescents
from 43 schools, of whom 54.5% were female, and 74.8% attended public
schools. Boys had higher mean WHtR than girls (0.45\ub10.06 vs
0.44\ub10.05; p=0.002) and higher WHtR at the 95th percentile (0.56
vs 0.54; p<0.05). The WHtR cutoffs according to the WHO criteria
ranged from 0.467 to 0.506 and 0.463 to 0.496 among girls and boys
respectively, with high sensitivity (82.8-95%) and specificity
(84-95.5%). The WHtR was significantly associated with body adiposity
measured by BMI. Its age-specific percentiles and cutoffs may be used
as additional surrogate markers of central obesity and its
co-morbidities