Katanoda Kota, Noda Mitsuhiko, Goto Atsushi, Mizunuma Hideki, Lee Jung Su, Hayashi Kunihiko
Division of Cancer Statistics Integration, Center for Cancer Control and Information Services, National Cancer Center, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Saitama Medical University, Saitama, Japan; Department of Diabetes Research, Diabetes Research Center, National Center for Global Health and Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
J Epidemiol. 2017 Sep;27(9):428-434. doi: 10.1016/j.je.2016.08.016. Epub 2017 Jun 20.
Although birth weight is considered as a fetal determinant of the development of adult-onset diabetes mellitus (DM), its public health importance relative to adult body mass index (BMI) remains unclear. We aimed to examine the association between adult-onset DM and birth weight in relation to adult BMI.
We conducted a self-administered questionnaire as a baseline survey of the Japanese Nurses' Health Study cohort between 2001 and 2007. Exclusion criteria were applied to the volunteer sample of 49,927 female nurses (age <30 years or unknown, current pregnancy, development of DM before the age of 30 years, unknown core variables), and data from 26,949 female nurses aged 30 years or older were used. The association between history of DM diagnosis and birth weight was analyzed using logistic regression.
A linear inverse association was observed between birth weight and DM, after adjustment for age, BMI, and parental history of DM. The odds ratio for developing DM per 100 g increase in birth weight was 0.93 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.90-0.96). The association was unchanged when birth weight was converted to percentile for gestational age. In the BMI-stratified analysis, the odds ratio for DM in the <2500 g birth weight group reached 4.75 (95% CI, 1.22-18.44, compared to the reference 3000-3499 g group) among women with normal low BMI (18.5-20.9).
Birth weight and its percentile for gestational age were associated with adult-onset DM. Attention should be paid to the risk of DM among women born with low weight, even when their current BMI is normal.
尽管出生体重被视为成人发病型糖尿病(DM)发展的胎儿决定因素,但其相对于成人身体质量指数(BMI)的公共卫生重要性仍不明确。我们旨在研究成人发病型DM与出生体重之间的关联,并与成人BMI相关联。
我们进行了一项自填式问卷调查,作为2001年至2007年日本护士健康研究队列的基线调查。对49927名女性护士的志愿者样本(年龄<30岁或未知、当前怀孕、30岁之前患DM、核心变量未知)应用了排除标准,并使用了26949名30岁及以上女性护士的数据。使用逻辑回归分析DM诊断史与出生体重之间的关联。
在调整年龄、BMI和DM家族史后,观察到出生体重与DM之间存在线性负相关。出生体重每增加100克患DM的优势比为0.93(95%置信区间[CI],0.90 - 0.96)。当将出生体重转换为胎龄百分位数时,该关联不变。在BMI分层分析中,在低BMI正常(18.5 - 20.9)的女性中,出生体重<2500克组患DM的优势比达到4.75(95%CI,1.22 - 18.44,与参考的3000 - 3499克组相比)。
出生体重及其胎龄百分位数与成人发病型DM相关。即使当前BMI正常,低体重出生的女性也应注意患DM的风险。