Why the scale isn't telling the whole story
Doctors have a new term for this tangled web of problems: Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic Syndrome, or CKM for short. It describes how the heart, kidneys, and metabolism are deeply connected. When one struggles, the others often follow.
CKM is surprisingly common. Millions of adults have at least one piece of it, whether that's high blood pressure, high blood sugar, or early kidney changes. Many don't know until damage is already done.
The frustrating part? Standard tools like BMI (Body Mass Index) were built decades ago. They don't always capture what matters most: where your fat sits, not just how much you weigh.
A smarter way to look at body shape
For years, doctors relied on BMI and waist size alone. Those tools are useful, but they miss a lot. A muscular person can look "overweight" on BMI. A thin person can carry dangerous belly fat and still look healthy on paper.
But here's the twist. Researchers have been testing a newer tool called the Body Roundness Index, or BRI. It uses your height and waist measurement to estimate how "round" your body is, giving a better picture of hidden visceral fat.
Visceral fat is the deep fat packed around your liver, pancreas, and intestines. It's the kind that quietly drives inflammation and disease.
Think of BMI like judging a house by its square footage. It tells you the size, but not the layout.
BRI is more like checking where the rooms are placed. It considers your shape, not just your size. A round, apple-shaped body scores higher than a slimmer, pear-shaped one, even if they weigh the same.
That shape matters because visceral fat behaves like a tiny, overworked factory. It pumps out chemicals that raise blood pressure, stress the kidneys, and confuse the body's blood sugar controls.
Researchers combined the results of 93 studies from 13 countries, published in Frontiers in Medicine. That's one of the largest analyses ever done on this topic.
They looked at how well BRI predicted different CKM-related problems, including metabolic syndrome, kidney disease, heart disease, and early death.
The strongest signal came from metabolic syndrome. BRI consistently pointed to higher risk in both men and women, and it did a good job telling apart people who had it from those who didn't.
For kidney disease, heart disease, and death risk, the connection was real but weaker. BRI helped, but it wasn't a stand-alone crystal ball.
This doesn't mean BRI is ready to replace your regular checkups.
This is where things get interesting
What makes BRI appealing is how simple it is. You don't need fancy scans or lab tests. Just a measuring tape and a calculator.
That matters in places where advanced imaging isn't easy to get. A reliable, low-cost tool could help doctors flag at-risk patients anywhere in the world.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
Experts have long pushed for better ways to spot CKM risk early. The earlier you catch warning signs, the more you can do about them, through diet, activity, sleep, and sometimes medication.
BRI isn't meant to replace BMI or waist size. Instead, it adds another layer. Used alongside other checks, it may help doctors build a fuller picture of your true risk.
You can't calculate BRI on your own without a formula, but you can ask your doctor about visceral fat and CKM risk at your next visit.
If you carry extra weight around your middle, that alone is worth a conversation. Ask about your waist measurement, blood pressure, blood sugar, and kidney function.
Small changes, like walking daily, cutting back on sugary drinks, and sleeping better, can meaningfully lower visceral fat over time.
The limitations
Most of the 93 studies were observational. That means they tracked people over time but couldn't prove cause and effect.
The strength of BRI also varied between countries and groups. More research is needed in diverse populations, especially long-term studies that follow people for many years.
BRI is promising, but it's still a research tool more than a clinical one. Scientists now want to test it in large, long-term studies to see how well it predicts real-world outcomes like heart attacks, dialysis, and survival. If those results hold up, BRI could soon join the standard toolkit your doctor uses to protect your heart, kidneys, and metabolic health, one simple measurement at a time.