Whincup Peter H, Kaye Samantha J, Owen Christopher G, Huxley Rachel, Cook Derek G, Anazawa Sonoko, Barrett-Connor Elizabeth, Bhargava Santosh K, Birgisdottir Bryndís E, Carlsson Sofia, de Rooij Susanne R, Dyck Roland F, Eriksson Johan G, Falkner Bonita, Fall Caroline, Forsén Tom, Grill Valdemar, Gudnason Vilmundur, Hulman Sonia, Hyppönen Elina, Jeffreys Mona, Lawlor Debbie A, Leon David A, Minami Junichi, Mishra Gita, Osmond Clive, Power Chris, Rich-Edwards Janet W, Roseboom Tessa J, Sachdev Harshpal Singh, Syddall Holly, Thorsdottir Inga, Vanhala Mauno, Wadsworth Michael, Yarbrough Donald E
Division of Community Health Sciences, St George's, University of London, Cranmer Terrace, London SW17 0RE, England.
JAMA. 2008 Dec 24;300(24):2886-97. doi: 10.1001/jama.2008.886.
Low birth weight is implicated as a risk factor for type 2 diabetes. However, the strength, consistency, independence, and shape of the association have not been systematically examined.
To conduct a quantitative systematic review examining published evidence on the association of birth weight and type 2 diabetes in adults.
Relevant studies published by June 2008 were identified through literature searches using EMBASE (from 1980), MEDLINE (from 1950), and Web of Science (from 1980), with a combination of text words and Medical Subject Headings. Studies with either quantitative or qualitative estimates of the association between birth weight and type 2 diabetes were included.
Estimates of association (odds ratio [OR] per kilogram of increase in birth weight) were obtained from authors or from published reports in models that allowed the effects of adjustment (for body mass index and socioeconomic status) and the effects of exclusion (for macrosomia and maternal diabetes) to be examined. Estimates were pooled using random-effects models, allowing for the possibility that true associations differed between populations.
Of 327 reports identified, 31 were found to be relevant. Data were obtained from 30 of these reports (31 populations; 6090 diabetes cases; 152 084 individuals). Inverse birth weight-type 2 diabetes associations were observed in 23 populations (9 of which were statistically significant) and positive associations were found in 8 (2 of which were statistically significant). Appreciable heterogeneity between populations (I(2) = 66%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 51%-77%) was largely explained by positive associations in 2 native North American populations with high prevalences of maternal diabetes and in 1 other population of young adults. In the remaining 28 populations, the pooled OR of type 2 diabetes, adjusted for age and sex, was 0.75 (95% CI, 0.70-0.81) per kilogram. The shape of the birth weight-type 2 diabetes association was strongly graded, particularly at birth weights of 3 kg or less. Adjustment for current body mass index slightly strengthened the association (OR, 0.76 [95% CI, 0.70-0.82] before adjustment and 0.70 [95% CI, 0.65-0.76] after adjustment). Adjustment for socioeconomic status did not materially affect the association (OR, 0.77 [95% CI, 0.70-0.84] before adjustment and 0.78 [95% CI, 0.72-0.84] after adjustment). There was no strong evidence of publication or small study bias.
In most populations studied, birth weight was inversely related to type 2 diabetes risk.
低出生体重被认为是2型糖尿病的一个风险因素。然而,这种关联的强度、一致性、独立性和形态尚未得到系统研究。
进行一项定量系统评价,以检验已发表的关于出生体重与成人2型糖尿病关联的证据。
通过使用EMBASE(自1980年起)、MEDLINE(自1950年起)和科学引文索引(自1980年起)进行文献检索,结合文本词和医学主题词,确定截至2008年6月发表的相关研究。纳入对出生体重与2型糖尿病关联进行定量或定性估计的研究。
关联估计值(出生体重每增加1千克的比值比[OR])从作者处或已发表报告的模型中获取,这些模型可检验调整(针对体重指数和社会经济状况)和排除(针对巨大儿和母体糖尿病)的影响。使用随机效应模型汇总估计值,考虑到不同人群之间真实关联可能存在差异。
在识别出的327篇报告中,发现31篇相关。从其中30篇报告(31个人群;6090例糖尿病病例;152084名个体)中获取数据。在23个人群中观察到出生体重与2型糖尿病呈负相关(其中9个具有统计学意义),在8个人群中发现呈正相关(其中2个具有统计学意义)。人群之间存在明显异质性(I² = 66%;95%置信区间[CI],51%-77%),主要由北美2个本土人群(母体糖尿病患病率高)和另1个年轻成人人群中的正相关所解释。在其余28个人群中,调整年龄和性别后,2型糖尿病的合并OR为每千克0.75(95%CI,0.70-0.81)。出生体重与2型糖尿病关联的形态呈强等级性,尤其是在出生体重3千克及以下时。调整当前体重指数后关联略有增强(调整前OR为0.76[95%CI,0.70-0.82],调整后为0.70[95%CI,0.65-0.76])。调整社会经济状况对关联没有实质性影响(调整前OR为0.77[95%CI,0.70-0.84],调整后为0.78[95%CI,0.72-0.84])。没有强有力的证据表明存在发表偏倚或小研究偏倚。
在大多数研究人群中,出生体重与2型糖尿病风险呈负相关。