Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom; MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Ann Epidemiol. 2024 Oct;98:59-67. doi: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2024.08.007. Epub 2024 Aug 31.
We aimed to investigate the associations between parental BMI and offspring BMI trajectories and to explore whether the parent-offspring BMI growth trajectory association differed according to family SEP or social mobility.
We used data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC). Children's weight and height were collected from 1 to 18 years. Parents' height and weight were reported pre-pregnancy. We assessed family SEP by measuring parents' and grandparents' educational attainment, social class, and social mobility by changes in education attainment across generations. Multilevel models were used to develop trajectories and assess patterns of change in offspring BMI, to associate parental BMI with these trajectories, and explore whether these associations differed by family SEP and social mobility.
13,612 children were included in the analyses. The average BMI of offspring whose parents were overweight or obese was higher throughout childhood and adolescence, compared to those with parents of normal BMI. Parental and grandparental low SEP were associated with higher child BMI, but there was little evidence of modification of parent-offspring associations. For example, at age 15 years the predicted mean BMI difference between children of overweight or obese mothers versus normal-weight mothers was 12.5 % (95 %CI: 10.1 % to 14.7 %) and 12.2 % (95 %CI: 10.3 % to 13.7 %) for high and low grandparental SEP, respectively.
These findings strengthen the evidence that higher parental BMI and lower family SEP were associated with higher offspring BMI, but we did not observe strong evidence that family SEP modifies the parental-offspring BMI association.
我们旨在研究父母 BMI 与子女 BMI 轨迹之间的关联,并探讨父母-子女 BMI 增长轨迹的关联是否因家庭社会经济地位(SEP)或社会流动性的不同而有所差异。
我们使用了阿冯纵向研究父母和儿童(ALSPAC)的数据。从 1 岁到 18 岁期间,收集了儿童的体重和身高数据。父母的身高和体重在怀孕前进行了报告。我们通过测量父母和祖父母的受教育程度、社会阶层和社会流动性(通过代际教育程度的变化来衡量)来评估家庭 SEP。使用多层次模型来开发轨迹并评估子女 BMI 的变化模式,将父母 BMI 与这些轨迹相关联,并探讨这些关联是否因家庭 SEP 和社会流动性而有所不同。
共有 13612 名儿童纳入分析。与父母 BMI 正常的儿童相比,父母超重或肥胖的子女在整个儿童期和青春期的 BMI 平均值更高。低社会经济地位的父母和祖父母与儿童 BMI 较高有关,但几乎没有证据表明父母-子女关联存在修饰作用。例如,在 15 岁时,超重或肥胖母亲的子女与正常体重母亲的子女的 BMI 差异预测均值为 12.5%(95%CI:10.1%至 14.7%),而高和低祖父母 SEP 的分别为 12.2%(95%CI:10.3%至 13.7%)。
这些发现进一步证实了较高的父母 BMI 和较低的家庭 SEP 与较高的子女 BMI 有关,但我们没有发现强有力的证据表明家庭 SEP 修饰了父母-子女 BMI 的关联。