Pizzi Costanza, Cole Tim J, Richiardi Lorenzo, dos-Santos-Silva Isabel, Corvalan Camila, De Stavola Bianca
Cancer Epidemiology Unit, Department of Medical Sciences, University of Turin and CPO-Piemonte, Turin, Italy ; Centre for Statistical Methodology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, UCL Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Feb 27;9(2):e90291. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090291. eCollection 2014.
Studying prenatal influences of early life growth is relevant to life-course epidemiology as some of its features have been linked to the onset of later diseases.
We studied the association between prenatal maternal characteristics (height, age, parity, education, pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), smoking, gestational diabetes and hypertension) and offspring weight trajectories in infancy using SuperImposition by Translation And Rotation (SITAR) models, which parameterize growth in terms of three biologically interpretable parameters: size, velocity and tempo. We used data from three contemporary cohorts based in Portugal (GXXI, n=738), Italy (NINFEA, n=2,925), and Chile (GOCS, n=959).
Estimates were generally consistent across the cohorts for maternal height, age, parity and pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity. Some exposures only affected one growth parameter (e.g. maternal height (per cm): 0.4% increase in size (95% confidence interval (CI):0.3; 0.5)), others were either found to affect size and velocity (e.g. pre-pregnancy underweight vs normal weight: smaller size (-4.9%, 95% CI:-6.5; -3.3), greater velocity (5.9%, 95% CI:1.9;10.0)), or to additionally influence tempo (e.g. pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity vs normal weight: increased size (7.9%, 95% CI:4.9;10.8), delayed tempo (0.26 months, 95% CI:0.11;0.41), decreased velocity (-4.9%, 95% CI: -10.8;0.9)).
By disentangling the growth parameters of size, velocity and tempo, we found that prenatal maternal characteristics, especially maternal smoking, pre-pregnancy overweight and underweight, parity and gestational hypertension, are associated with different aspects of infant weight growth. These results may offer insights into the mechanisms governing infant growth.
研究生命早期生长的产前影响与生命历程流行病学相关,因为其一些特征与后期疾病的发生有关。
我们使用平移和旋转叠加(SITAR)模型研究了产前母亲特征(身高、年龄、产次、教育程度、孕前体重指数(BMI)、吸烟、妊娠期糖尿病和高血压)与婴儿期后代体重轨迹之间的关联,该模型根据三个具有生物学解释性的参数来参数化生长:大小、速度和节奏。我们使用了来自葡萄牙(GXXI,n = 738)、意大利(NINFEA,n = 2925)和智利(GOCS,n = 959)的三个当代队列的数据。
各队列中关于母亲身高、年龄、产次和孕前超重/肥胖的估计结果总体一致。一些暴露因素仅影响一个生长参数(例如母亲身高(每厘米):大小增加0.4%(95%置信区间(CI):0.3;0.5)),其他因素则被发现影响大小和速度(例如孕前体重过轻与正常体重相比:较小的大小(-4.9%,95% CI:-6.5;-3.3),较大的速度(5.9%,95% CI:1.9;10.0)),或者还会影响节奏(例如孕前超重/肥胖与正常体重相比:大小增加(7.9%,95% CI:4.9;10.8),节奏延迟(0.26个月,95% CI:0.11;0.41),速度降低(-4.9%,95% CI:-10.8;0.9))。
通过分解大小、速度和节奏这些生长参数,我们发现产前母亲特征,尤其是母亲吸烟、孕前超重和体重过轻、产次和妊娠期高血压,与婴儿体重增长的不同方面相关。这些结果可能为控制婴儿生长的机制提供见解。