John Jeeva, Stannard Seb, Fraser Simon D S, Berrington Ann, Alwan Nisreen A
School of Primary Care, Population Sciences and Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom.
Department of Social Statistics and Demography, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2025 Mar 18;20(3):e0319200. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319200. eCollection 2025.
To investigate associations between clustered adverse neonatal events and later-life multimorbidity.
Secondary analysis of birth cohort data.
Prospective birth cohort study of individuals born in Britain in one week of 1970.
Respondents provided data at birth (n = 17,196), age 34 (n = 11,261), age 38 (n = 9,665), age 42 (n = 9,840), and age 46 (n = 8,580).
Mixed components analysis determined included factors, 'Birthweight'; 'Neonatal cyanosis'; 'Neonatal cerebral signs'; 'Neonatal illnesses'; 'Neonatal breathing difficulties'; and 'Prolonged duration to establishment of respiratory rate at birth', within the composite adverse neonatal event score. Log-binomial regression quantified the unadjusted and covariate-adjusted (paternal employment status and social class; maternal smoking status; maternal age; parity; cohort member smoking status and Body Mass Index) associations between the adverse neonatal event score and risk of multimorbidity in adulthood.
Multimorbidity at each adult data sweep, defined as the presence of two or more Long-Term Conditions (LTCs).
13.7% of respondents experienced one or more adverse neonatal event(s) at birth. The percentage reporting multimorbidity increased steadily from 14.6% at age 34 to 25.5% at age 46. A significant association was only observed at the 38 years sweep; those who had experienced two or more adverse neonatal events had a 41.0% (95% CI: 1.05 - 1.88) increased risk of multimorbidity, compared to those who had not suffered any adverse neonatal events at birth. This association was maintained following adjustment for parental confounders and adult smoking status.
Adverse neonatal events at birth may be independently associated with the development of midlife multimorbidity. Programmes and policies aimed at tackling the growing public health burden of multimorbidity may also need to consider interventions to reduce adverse neonatal events at birth.
研究新生儿不良事件聚集与晚年多种疾病并存之间的关联。
出生队列数据的二次分析。
对1970年某一周在英国出生的个体进行的前瞻性出生队列研究。
受访者在出生时(n = 17196)、34岁时(n = 11261)、38岁时(n = 9665)、42岁时(n = 9840)和46岁时(n = 8580)提供数据。
混合成分分析确定复合不良新生儿事件评分中的因素,包括“出生体重”、“新生儿发绀”、“新生儿脑部体征”、“新生儿疾病”、“新生儿呼吸困难”以及“出生时呼吸频率建立时间延长”。对数二项回归量化了不良新生儿事件评分与成年后多种疾病并存风险之间的未调整和协变量调整(父亲就业状况和社会阶层;母亲吸烟状况;母亲年龄;产次;队列成员吸烟状况和体重指数)关联。
每次成人数据采集时的多种疾病并存情况,定义为存在两种或更多种长期病症(LTCs)。
13.7%的受访者在出生时经历了一次或多次不良新生儿事件。报告多种疾病并存的比例从34岁时的14.6%稳步上升至46岁时的25.5%。仅在38岁的数据采集时观察到显著关联;与出生时未经历任何不良新生儿事件的人相比,经历两次或更多次不良新生儿事件的人患多种疾病并存的风险增加了41.0%(95%CI:1.05 - 1.88)。在对父母混杂因素和成人吸烟状况进行调整后,这种关联仍然存在。
出生时的不良新生儿事件可能与中年多种疾病并存的发生独立相关。旨在应对多种疾病并存日益增加的公共卫生负担的计划和政策可能还需要考虑采取干预措施以减少出生时的不良新生儿事件。