Davies Anna A, Smith George Davey, May Margaret T, Ben-Shlomo Yoav
Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Canynge Hall, Whiteladies Rd, Bristol, BS8 2PR, United Kingdom.
Hypertension. 2006 Sep;48(3):431-6. doi: 10.1161/01.HYP.0000236551.00191.61. Epub 2006 Jul 31.
Data on the early life origins of adult hypertension have been widely reported: however, recent research shows that the strength of association between small size at birth and higher blood pressure weakens as study size increases. In this article, we retest the association between birth weight and systolic blood pressure in a large cohort, examine whether age interacts with birth weight to predict blood pressure, and explore reasons why birth weight-blood pressure associations tend to weaken with increasing study size. Measurements from 25874 employees of a large United Kingdom company (mean [SD] age: 38.0 [7.9] years), undertaking voluntary occupational health screening, were available. Using linear regression analysis, we observed that systolic blood pressure changed -0.8 (95% CI: -1.1 to -0.5) mmHg per 1-kg increase in birth weight (P<0.001) adjusted for age and sex and -1.1 (95% CI: -1.3 to -0.8) mmHg/kg (P<0.001) after further adjustment for body size. This inverse association amplified with age (age/birth weight interaction term P<0.001). In participants reporting birth weight from hospital records (n=744), systolic blood pressure changed -1.4 (95% CI: -3.1 to 0.2) mmHg/kg compared with -0.8 (95% CI: -1.0 to -0.5) mmHg/kg in all of the other participants. Finally, the data show evidence of "fixed-category blood pressure allocation," where participants are allocated certain blood pressure values, such as 120/80 mmHg, independent of actual blood pressure. Although the association between birth weight and systolic blood pressure was weaker than observed in smaller studies, recalled birth weight and fixed blood pressure measurement error may generate a trend toward weaker associations in larger studies.
然而,最近的研究表明,出生时体型较小与较高血压之间的关联强度会随着研究样本量的增加而减弱。在本文中,我们在一个大型队列中重新检验出生体重与收缩压之间的关联,研究年龄是否与出生体重相互作用以预测血压,并探讨出生体重与血压的关联为何会随着研究样本量的增加而趋于减弱。我们获取了一家大型英国公司25874名员工(平均[标准差]年龄:38.0[7.9]岁)自愿进行职业健康筛查的测量数据。通过线性回归分析,我们观察到,在调整年龄和性别后,出生体重每增加1千克,收缩压变化-0.8(95%可信区间:-1.1至-0.5)mmHg(P<0.001),在进一步调整体型后为-1.1(95%可信区间:-1.3至-0.8)mmHg/千克(P<0.001)。这种负相关随着年龄增长而增强(年龄/出生体重交互项P<0.001)。在报告医院记录出生体重的参与者(n = 744)中,收缩压变化为-1.4(95%可信区间:-3.1至0.2)mmHg/千克,而在所有其他参与者中为-0.8(95%可信区间:-1.0至-0.5)mmHg/千克。最后,数据显示存在“固定类别血压分配”的证据,即参与者被分配特定的血压值,如120/80 mmHg,而与实际血压无关。尽管出生体重与收缩压之间的关联比在较小研究中观察到的要弱,但回忆的出生体重和固定血压测量误差可能在较大研究中产生关联减弱的趋势。