Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; The Generation R Study Group, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Clin Nutr. 2018 Oct;37(5):1589-1595. doi: 10.1016/j.clnu.2017.08.010. Epub 2017 Aug 13.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Cardiometabolic risk has its origins in early life. However, it is unclear whether diet during early childhood is associated with cardiometabolic health, and what the role is of obesity. We aimed to study whether overall diet during early childhood is associated with cardiometabolic health and to examine if difference in body composition explain this association.
We examined associations of different types of dietary patterns in infancy with cardiometabolic health at school age among 2026 Dutch children participating in a population-based cohort in the Netherlands. Food intake at the age of 1 year was assessed with a food-frequency questionnaire. Three dietary pattern approaches were used: 1) An a priori-defined diet quality score; 2) dietary patterns based on variation in food intake, derived from principal component analysis (PCA); and 3) dietary patterns based on variations in fat and fat-free mass index, derived with reduced-rank regression (RRR). At the children's age of 6 years, we measured their body composition, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and serum concentrations of insulin, triglycerides, and HDL-cholesterol, which we combined in a cardiometabolic risk-factor score.
We observed that, after adjustment for confounders, children with higher adherence to a 'Health-conscious' PCA-derived pattern had a lower cardiometabolic risk-factor score (-0.07 SD (95%CI -0.12; -0.02) per SD). This association did not change after adjustment for fat and fat-free mass index. The RRR-derived dietary patterns based on variations in body composition were not associated with the cardiometabolic risk-factor score.
Our results suggest that diet in early childhood may affect cardiometabolic health independent of differences in body composition.
心脏代谢风险起源于生命早期。然而,目前尚不清楚儿童早期的饮食是否与心脏代谢健康有关,以及肥胖的作用是什么。我们旨在研究儿童早期的整体饮食是否与心脏代谢健康有关,并探讨身体成分的差异是否可以解释这种关联。
我们在荷兰的一项基于人群的队列研究中,调查了 2026 名荷兰儿童在婴儿期不同类型饮食模式与学龄期心脏代谢健康之间的关系。1 岁时的食物摄入量通过食物频率问卷进行评估。使用了三种饮食模式方法:1)预先定义的饮食质量评分;2)基于食物摄入量变化的饮食模式,通过主成分分析(PCA)得出;3)基于脂肪和去脂体重指数变化的饮食模式,通过降秩回归(RRR)得出。在儿童 6 岁时,我们测量了他们的身体成分、收缩压和舒张压以及血清胰岛素、甘油三酯和高密度脂蛋白胆固醇浓度,将这些指标组合成一个心脏代谢风险因素评分。
在调整了混杂因素后,我们发现,与较高的“健康意识”PCA 衍生模式的依从性相关的儿童,其心脏代谢风险因素评分较低(-0.07 SD(95%CI -0.12;-0.02)/SD)。这种关联在调整脂肪和去脂体重指数后没有改变。基于身体成分变化的 RRR 衍生的饮食模式与心脏代谢风险因素评分无关。
我们的研究结果表明,儿童早期的饮食可能独立于身体成分的差异而影响心脏代谢健康。