Institute of Physiology and Biochemistry of Nutrition, Max Rubner-Institut, Federal Research Institute of Nutrition and Food, Karlsruhe, Germany.
Institute of Child Nutrition, Max Rubner-Institut, Federal Research Institute of Nutrition and Food, Karlsruhe, Germany.
Eur J Clin Nutr. 2021 Dec;75(12):1735-1744. doi: 10.1038/s41430-021-00920-7. Epub 2021 Jun 15.
Overweight, obesity, and their comorbidities remain global health challenges. When established early in life, overweight is often sustained into adulthood and contributes to the early onset of non-communicable diseases. Parental pre-conception overweight and obesity is a risk factor for overweight and obesity in childhood and beyond. This increased risk likely is based on an interplay of genetic alterations and environmental exposures already at the beginning of life, although mechanisms are still poorly defined. In this narrative review, potential routes of transmission of pre-conceptional overweight/obesity from mothers and fathers to their offspring as well as prevention strategies are discussed. Observational evidence suggests that metabolic changes due to parental overweight/obesity affect epigenetic markers in oocytes and sperms alike and may influence epigenetic programming and reprogramming processes during embryogenesis. While weight reduction in overweight/obese men and women, who plan to become pregnant, seems advisable to improve undesirable outcomes in offspring, caution might be warranted. Limited evidence suggests that weight loss in men and women in close proximity to conception might increase undesirable offspring outcomes at birth due to nutritional deficits and/or metabolic disturbances in the parent also affecting gamete quality. A change in the dietary pattern might be more advisable. The data reviewed here suggest that pre-conception intervention strategies should shift from women to couples, and future studies should address possible interactions between maternal and paternal contribution to longitudinal childhood outcomes. Randomized controlled trials focusing on effects of pre-conceptional diet quality on long-term offspring health are warranted.
超重、肥胖及其合并症仍然是全球健康挑战。当超重在生命早期确立后,往往会持续到成年期,并导致非传染性疾病的早发。父母在受孕前超重和肥胖是儿童期及以后超重和肥胖的一个危险因素。这种风险增加可能基于遗传改变和环境暴露在生命开始时的相互作用,尽管其机制仍未明确定义。在这篇叙述性综述中,讨论了从父母向子女传递受孕前超重/肥胖的潜在途径以及预防策略。观察性证据表明,由于父母超重/肥胖导致的代谢变化会影响卵子和精子中的表观遗传标记,并可能影响胚胎发生过程中的表观遗传编程和重编程过程。虽然超重/肥胖的男性和女性在计划怀孕时减轻体重似乎可以改善后代的不良结局,但需要谨慎。有限的证据表明,由于父母的营养不足和/或代谢紊乱也会影响配子质量,因此在接近受孕时男性和女性的体重减轻可能会增加出生时的不良后代结局。改变饮食模式可能更为可取。这里回顾的数据表明,受孕前干预策略应从女性转向夫妇,未来的研究应解决母亲和父亲对儿童期纵向结局的贡献之间可能存在的相互作用。有必要进行聚焦于受孕前饮食质量对长期后代健康影响的随机对照试验。