AUTHOR=Wang Anzhi , Zeng Youping , Gao Xiaoyan , Lin Xunge , Du Shenshen , Wang Ping , Pan Yun TITLE=Cumulative behavioral and metabolic determinants of health are associated with higher inflammation-related indices: insights from a cross-sectional study (NHANES 2005–2018) JOURNAL=Frontiers in Public Health VOLUME=Volume 13 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/public-health/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2025.1602629 DOI=10.3389/fpubh.2025.1602629 ISSN=2296-2565 ABSTRACT=ObjectiveThis study innovatively investigates the cumulative associations between behavioral determinants of health (BDoH), metabolic determinants of health (MDoH), and systemic inflammation biomarkers in U.S. adults, using a novel cross-sectional framework to quantify their synergistic effects.MethodsUtilizing cross-sectional data from 18,500 participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES 2005–2018 cycle), we developed a composite exposure model integrating BDoH (smoking status, physical activity, dietary quality) and MDoH (obesity metrics, hypertension, diabetes) through standardized questionnaires and clinical measurements. Systemic immune-inflammation index (SII) and systemic inflammatory response index (SIRI) were calculated from peripheral blood cell counts. Multivariable-adjusted logistic regression models examined dose–response relationships, with trend analysis explicitly testing cumulative BDoH-MDoH interactions.ResultsThe cohort (mean age 44.3 ± 0.3 years; 52.4% male) demonstrated significant positive associations between adverse health determinants and inflammatory indices. Current tobacco use (OR = 1.32, 95%CI = 1.18–1.47), suboptimal diet (HEI < 52: OR = 1.24, 95%CI = 1.11–1.38), obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2: OR = 1.41, 95%CI = 1.27–1.56), and central adipometry (OR = 1.39, 95%CI = 1.25–1.54) showed strongest correlations with elevated SII/SIRI. Metabolic disorders exhibited distinct patterns: hypertension and diabetes associated specifically with SIRI elevation (OR = 1.19, 95%CI = 1.06–1.33 and OR = 1.17, 95%CI = 1.03–1.32, respectively), while physical inactivity (<600 MET-min/week) uniquely correlated with SII increase (OR = 1.26, 95%CI = 1.13–1.40). Notably, our cumulative model revealed synergistic effects: exposure to ≥3 adverse behavioral determinants amplified inflammation risks (SII: OR = 1.57, 95%CI = 1.42–1.73; SIRI: OR = 1.49, 95%CI = 1.35–1.64), with significant dose-dependent trends (P-trend<0.001). Co-occurring metabolic abnormalities demonstrated additive inflammatory effects (P-trend<0.001), exceeding individual risk factor impacts.ConclusionThis cross-sectional study provides the first evidence that integrated BDoH-MDoH cumulative exposure models uncover distinct and synergistic inflammatory pathways. Both individual and combined behavioral-metabolic risk factors significantly associate with systemic inflammation biomarker elevation, highlighting the necessity of dual-target intervention strategies.