Belbasis Lazaros, Savvidou Makrina D, Kanu Chidimma, Evangelou Evangelos, Tzoulaki Ioanna
Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology, University of Ioannina Medical School, Ioannina, Greece.
Academic Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, Imperial College London, London, UK.
BMC Med. 2016 Sep 28;14(1):147. doi: 10.1186/s12916-016-0692-5.
Birth weight, a marker of the intrauterine environment, has been extensively studied in epidemiological research in relation to subsequent health and disease. Although numerous meta-analyses have been published examining the association between birth weight and subsequent health-related outcomes, the epidemiological credibility of these associations has not been thoroughly assessed. The objective of this study is to map the diverse health outcomes associated with birth weight and evaluate the credibility and presence of biases in the reported associations.
An umbrella review was performed to identify systematic reviews and meta-analyses of observational studies investigating the association between birth weight and subsequent health outcomes and traits. For each association, we estimated the summary effect size by random-effects and fixed-effects models, the 95 % confidence interval, and the 95 % prediction interval. We also assessed the between-study heterogeneity, evidence for small-study effects and excess significance bias. We further applied standardized methodological criteria to evaluate the epidemiological credibility of the statistically significant associations.
Thirty-nine articles including 78 associations between birth weight and diverse outcomes met the eligibility criteria. A wide range of health outcomes has been studied, ranging from anthropometry and metabolic diseases, cardiovascular diseases and cardiovascular risk factors, various cancers, respiratory diseases and allergies, musculoskeletal traits and perinatal outcomes. Forty-seven of 78 associations presented a nominally significant summary effect and 21 associations remained statistically significant at P < 1 × 10. Thirty associations presented large or very large between-study heterogeneity. Evidence for small-study effects and excess significance bias was present in 13 and 16 associations, respectively. One association with low birth weight (increased risk for all-cause mortality), two dose-response associations with birth weight (higher bone mineral concentration in hip and lower risk for mortality from cardiovascular diseases per 1 kg increase in birth weight) and one association with small-for-gestational age infants with normal birth weight (increased risk for childhood stunting) presented convincing evidence. Eleven additional associations had highly suggestive evidence.
The range of outcomes convincingly associated with birth weight might be narrower than originally described under the "fetal origin hypothesis" of disease. There is weak evidence that birth weight constitutes an effective public health intervention marker.
出生体重作为子宫内环境的一个指标,在流行病学研究中已被广泛研究,以探讨其与后续健康和疾病的关系。尽管已经发表了大量的荟萃分析来研究出生体重与后续健康相关结局之间的关联,但这些关联在流行病学上的可信度尚未得到全面评估。本研究的目的是梳理与出生体重相关的各种健康结局,并评估所报告关联中的可信度和偏倚情况。
进行一项伞状综述,以识别关于出生体重与后续健康结局及特征之间关联的观察性研究的系统评价和荟萃分析。对于每一种关联,我们通过随机效应模型和固定效应模型估计汇总效应量、95%置信区间和95%预测区间。我们还评估了研究间的异质性、小研究效应的证据和过度显著性偏倚。我们进一步应用标准化的方法学标准来评估具有统计学显著性的关联在流行病学上的可信度。
39篇文章,包括78种出生体重与不同结局之间的关联,符合纳入标准。已研究了广泛的健康结局,范围涵盖人体测量学和代谢性疾病、心血管疾病和心血管危险因素、各种癌症、呼吸系统疾病和过敏、肌肉骨骼特征以及围产期结局。78种关联中有47种呈现名义上显著的汇总效应,21种关联在P<1×10时仍具有统计学显著性。30种关联呈现出较大或非常大的研究间异质性。分别有13种和16种关联存在小研究效应和过度显著性偏倚的证据。一种低出生体重关联(全因死亡率风险增加)、两种出生体重的剂量反应关联(出生体重每增加1千克,髋部骨矿物质浓度升高且心血管疾病死亡率风险降低)以及一种出生体重正常的小于胎龄儿关联(儿童发育迟缓风险增加)呈现出令人信服的证据。另外有11种关联具有高度提示性证据。
与出生体重有令人信服关联的结局范围可能比疾病的“胎儿起源假说”最初描述的要窄。几乎没有证据表明出生体重构成一个有效的公共卫生干预指标。