Division of Research, Epidemiology, and Prevention Section, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, California, USA.
Diabetes. 2010 Feb;59(2):495-504. doi: 10.2337/db09-1197. Epub 2009 Dec 3.
The objective of the study was to prospectively assess the association between lactation duration and incidence of the metabolic syndrome among women of reproductive age.
Participants were 1,399 women (39% black, aged 18-30 years) in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study, an ongoing multicenter, population-based, prospective observational cohort study conducted in the U.S. Women were nulliparous and free of the metabolic syndrome at baseline (1985-1986) and before subsequent pregnancies, and reexamined 7, 10, 15, and/or 20 years after baseline. Incident metabolic syndrome case participants were identified according to National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III (NCEP ATP III) criteria. Complementary log-log models estimated relative hazards of incident metabolic syndrome among time-dependent lactation duration categories by gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) adjusted for age, race, study center, baseline covariates (BMI, metabolic syndrome components, education, smoking, physical activity), and time-dependent parity.
Among 704 parous women (620 non-GDM, 84 GDM), there were 120 incident metabolic syndrome case participants in 9,993 person-years (overall incidence rate 12.0 per 1,000 person-years; 10.8 for non-GDM, 22.1 for GDM). Increased lactation duration was associated with lower crude metabolic syndrome incidence rates from 0-1 month through >9 months (P < 0.001). Fully adjusted relative hazards showed that risk reductions associated with longer lactation were stronger among GDM (relative hazard range 0.14-0.56; P = 0.03) than non-GDM groups (relative hazard range 0.44-0.61; P = 0.03).
Longer duration of lactation was associated with lower incidence of the metabolic syndrome years after weaning among women with a history of GDM and without GDM, controlling for preconception measurements, BMI, and sociodemographic and lifestyle traits. Lactation may have persistent favorable effects on women's cardiometabolic health.
本研究旨在前瞻性评估哺乳期持续时间与育龄期妇女代谢综合征发病的相关性。
本研究参与者为正在进行的、多中心、基于人群的前瞻性观察队列研究——美国冠状动脉风险发展青少年研究(CARDIA)中的 1399 名女性(39%为黑人,年龄 18-30 岁)。这些女性在基线时(1985-1986 年)和随后的妊娠前均为初产妇,且无代谢综合征,并在基线后 7、10、15 和/或 20 年进行了重新检查。根据国家胆固醇教育计划成人治疗专家组 III (NCEP ATP III)标准,确定新发生代谢综合征病例参与者。互补对数-对数模型根据妊娠糖尿病(GDM)调整年龄、种族、研究中心、基线协变量(BMI、代谢综合征成分、教育、吸烟、体力活动)和时间依赖性产次,估计新发生代谢综合征的相对危险度。
在 704 名经产女性中(620 名非 GDM,84 名 GDM),9993 人年中有 120 名新发生代谢综合征病例参与者(总发病率为 12.0/1000 人年;非 GDM 为 10.8/1000 人年,GDM 为 22.1/1000 人年)。哺乳期持续时间增加与 0-1 个月至>9 个月的代谢综合征粗发病率降低相关(P < 0.001)。完全调整后的相对危险度显示,在 GDM(相对危险度范围 0.14-0.56;P = 0.03)和非 GDM 组(相对危险度范围 0.44-0.61;P = 0.03)中,较长哺乳期与风险降低的相关性更强。
在患有和不患有 GDM 的女性中,断奶后较长时间的哺乳与代谢综合征的发病率较低相关,这与妊娠前测量、BMI 以及社会人口统计学和生活方式特征有关。哺乳期可能对女性的心脏代谢健康有持续的有益影响。