Supplementary Material for: Association between Inflammatory and Obesity Markers in a Swiss Population-Based Sample (CoLaus Study) P.Marques-Vidal M.Bochud F.Bastardot T.Lüscher F.Ferrero J.-M.Gaspoz F.Paccaud A.Urwyler von Känel R. C.Hock 2012 <b><i>Objective:</i></b> To assess the associations between obesity markers (BMI, waist circumference and %body fat) and inflammatory markers (interleukin-1β (IL-1β); interleukin-6 (IL-6); tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP)). <b><i>Methods:</i></b> Population sample of 2,884 men and 3,201 women aged 35–75 years. Associations were assessed using ridge regression adjusting for age, leisure-time physical activity, and smoking. <b><i>Results:</i></b> No differences were found in IL-1β levels between participants with increased obesity markers and healthy counterparts; multivariate regression showed %body fat to be negatively associated with IL-1β. Participants with high %body fat or abdominal obesity had higher IL-6 levels, but no independent association between IL-6 levels and obesity markers was found on multivariate regression. Participants with abdominal obesity had higher TNF-α levels, and positive associations were found between TNF-α levels and waist circumference in men and between TNF-α levels and BMI in women. Obese participants had higher hs-CRP levels, and these differences persisted after multivariate adjustment; similarly, positive associations were found between hs-CRP levels and all obesity markers studied. <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> Obesity markers are differentially associated with cytokine levels. %Body fat is negatively associated with IL-1β; BMI (in women) and waist circumference (in men) are associated with TNF-α; all obesity markers are positively associated with hs-CRP.