Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN, 38163, USA.
Departments of Pediatrics and Physiology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN, 38103, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2019 Oct;43(10):1914-1922. doi: 10.1038/s41366-019-0326-z. Epub 2019 Jan 31.
We investigated the individual and additive effects of three modifiable maternal metabolic factors, including pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity, gestational weight gain (GWG), and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), on early childhood growth trajectories and obesity risk.
A total of 1425 mother-offspring dyads (953 black and 472 white) from a longitudinal birth cohort were included in this study. Latent class growth modeling was performed to identify the trajectories of body mass index (BMI) from birth to 4 years in children. Poisson regression models were used to examine the associations between the maternal metabolic risk factors and child BMI trajectories and obesity risk at 4 years.
We identified three discrete BMI trajectory groups, characterized as rising-high-BMI (12.6%), moderate-BMI (61.0%), or low-BMI (26.4%) growth. Both maternal pre-pregnancy obesity (adjusted relative risk [adjRR] = 1.96; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.36-2.83) and excessive GWG (adjRR = 1.71, 95% CI: 1.13-2.58) were significantly associated with the rising-high-BMI trajectory, as manifested by rapid weight gain during infancy and a stable but high BMI until 4 years. All three maternal metabolic indices were significantly associated with childhood obesity at age 4 years (adjRR for pre-pregnancy obesity = 2.24, 95% CI: 1.62-3.10; adjRR for excessive GWG = 1.46, 95% CI: 1.01-2.09; and adjRR for GDM = 2.14, 95% = 1.47-3.12). In addition, risk of rising-high BMI trajectory or obesity at age 4 years was stronger among mothers with more than one metabolic risk factor. We did not observe any difference in these associations by race.
Maternal pre-pregnancy obesity, excessive GWG, and GDM individually and jointly predict rapid growth and obesity at age 4 years in offspring, regardless of race. Interventions targeting maternal obesity and metabolism may prevent or slow the rate of development of childhood obesity.
本研究旨在探究三种可改变的母体代谢因素(孕前超重/肥胖、孕期体重增加和妊娠期糖尿病)对儿童早期生长轨迹和肥胖风险的单独和累加影响。
本研究共纳入了来自纵向出生队列的 1425 对母婴对子(953 名黑人,472 名白人)。采用潜在类别增长模型来识别儿童从出生到 4 岁时的体重指数(BMI)轨迹。使用泊松回归模型来检验母体代谢危险因素与儿童 BMI 轨迹和 4 岁时肥胖风险之间的关系。
本研究确定了三种离散的 BMI 轨迹组,分别为增长型高 BMI(12.6%)、中等 BMI(61.0%)和低 BMI(26.4%)。母体孕前肥胖(调整后的相对风险 [adjRR] = 1.96;95%置信区间 [CI]:1.36-2.83)和孕期体重过度增加(adjRR = 1.71,95% CI:1.13-2.58)与增长型高 BMI 轨迹显著相关,表现为婴儿期体重快速增加,且 BMI 稳定但较高,直至 4 岁。所有三种母体代谢指标均与 4 岁时的儿童肥胖显著相关(孕前肥胖的 adjRR = 2.24,95% CI:1.62-3.10;孕期体重过度增加的 adjRR = 1.46,95% CI:1.01-2.09;GDM 的 adjRR = 2.14,95% CI:1.47-3.12)。此外,在具有多种代谢危险因素的母亲中,增长型高 BMI 轨迹或 4 岁时肥胖的风险更高。我们没有观察到这些关联在种族之间存在差异。
无论种族如何,母体孕前肥胖、孕期体重过度增加和 GDM 单独和共同预测后代在 4 岁时的快速生长和肥胖。针对母体肥胖和代谢的干预措施可能会预防或减缓儿童肥胖的发展速度。