Terry M B, Wei Y, Esserman D, McKeague I W, Susser E
1Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Medical Center, Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
3Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
J Dev Orig Health Dis. 2011 Apr;2(2):99-111. doi: 10.1017/S2040174411000067.
Growing evidence suggests obesity may have its roots in early life but it is still uncertain whether prenatal factors operate primarily though altering early infant growth. It is also still unclear if rapid growth during selected time periods is more important than other time periods in predicting future body size. Using prospectively collected data on 20,523 participants born from 1959 to 1966 (10,327 boys; 10,196 girls) of the Collaborative Perinatal Project, we investigated the associations between pre- and postnatal factors and childhood body size at age 7 years and compared these associations across linear, logistic and quantile regression models. Maternal body mass index (BMI), maternal pregnancy weight gain, birth weight and postnatal weight change for three time periods (birth to 4 months; 4-12 months; 1-4 years) were all positively and independently associated with BMI at age 7 years. Rapid growth during each time period had a similar association BMI at age 7 years. For example, a 10-percentile increase in weight increased the probability of being overweight at age 7 years by approximately two-fold regardless of time period (OR = 1.8-2.2 for boys and girls). Using same-sex siblings (n = 571 boy sets; n = 651 girl sets) from the same cohort, we observed that siblings with higher BMI at age 7 years than their same-sex siblings were more likely to have higher maternal pregnancy weight gain, higher maternal pre-pregnancy BMI, higher birth weight and increased rate of weight gain during the three time periods. These consistent findings both from the overall cohort and the sibling analyses suggest that there are multiple, rather than specific critical periods of influence shaping childhood body size.
越来越多的证据表明,肥胖可能源于生命早期,但产前因素是否主要通过改变婴儿早期生长起作用仍不确定。在预测未来体型方面,特定时间段内的快速生长是否比其他时间段更重要也尚不清楚。利用协作围产期项目前瞻性收集的1959年至1966年出生的20523名参与者(10327名男孩;10196名女孩)的数据,我们研究了产前和产后因素与7岁儿童体型之间的关联,并在线性、逻辑和分位数回归模型中比较了这些关联。母亲体重指数(BMI)、母亲孕期体重增加、出生体重以及三个时间段(出生至4个月;4至12个月;1至4岁)的产后体重变化均与7岁时的BMI呈正相关且相互独立。每个时间段的快速生长与7岁时的BMI都有类似的关联。例如,体重增加10个百分点会使7岁时超重的概率增加约两倍,无论在哪个时间段(男孩和女孩的OR = 1.8 - 2.2)。利用同一队列中的同性兄弟姐妹(571组男孩;651组女孩),我们观察到7岁时BMI高于同性兄弟姐妹的孩子,其母亲孕期体重增加更高、母亲孕前BMI更高、出生体重更高,且在三个时间段内体重增加率更高。来自总体队列和兄弟姐妹分析的这些一致发现表明,塑造儿童体型的有多个而非特定的关键影响时期。