Van den Hof Malon, Veer Ilona, van Gaalen Ruben, Roseboom Tessa
Department of Epidemiology and Data Science, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Amsterdam Reproduction and Development Research Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
BMJ Public Health. 2025 Aug 17;3(2):e002176. doi: 10.1136/bmjph-2024-002176. eCollection 2025.
The first 1000 days of life are a crucial foundational period during which many different factors can impact development. It is unknown to what extent different factors cluster and how this affects later-life outcomes.
In this population-based cohort study, we used registry data of all children born in the Netherlands in 2006. We used latent class analysis to investigate clustering of circumstances in the first 1000 days of life, including socioeconomic indicators (household income, parental education), prenatal and perinatal biomedical factors (maternal age, late-start antenatal care, preterm birth/born small for gestational age/poor start in life), and adverse childhood experiences in the first 1000 days (parental death, separation, mental health problems and detention) and associated clusters with school performance (ie, highest secondary school level advice at age 12).
In the study population of 181 575 children, we identified five clusters. We labelled cluster 1 (39%) and cluster 2 (27%) as 'resource-richest', clusters 3 (15%) and 4 (15%) as 'intermediate', and cluster 5 (5%) as 'resource-poorest', with the latter having the highest probabilities of low socioeconomic resources, adverse prenatal and perinatal biomedical factors and adverse childhood experiences in the first 1000 days. Compared with those in the resource-richest cluster (cluster 2), children in the resource-poorest cluster (cluster 5) had poorer school performance (OR 0.13, 95% CI 0.11 to 0.14), also after adjustment for parental education and household income (OR 0.20, 95% CI 0.18 to 0.24).
Clustering of risk factors across different domains during the first 1000 days of life was associated with poorer school performance at age 12, suggesting that children growing up in resource-limited environments during this critical developmental window may face challenges in reaching their full developmental and educational potential. If we find similar associations with health-related outcomes, this would further underscore the importance of policies that strengthen resources across multiple domains early in life to support long-term human potential.
生命的最初1000天是一个关键的基础时期,在此期间许多不同因素会影响发育。目前尚不清楚不同因素在多大程度上聚集在一起以及这如何影响后期生活结果。
在这项基于人群的队列研究中,我们使用了2006年在荷兰出生的所有儿童的登记数据。我们使用潜在类别分析来研究生命最初1000天内各种情况的聚集情况,包括社会经济指标(家庭收入、父母教育程度)、产前和围产期生物医学因素(母亲年龄、产前护理开始晚、早产/小于胎龄儿/生命起点不佳)以及生命最初1000天内的不良童年经历(父母死亡、分居、心理健康问题和拘留),以及与学业成绩相关的类别(即12岁时的最高中学水平建议)。
在181575名儿童的研究人群中,我们确定了五个类别。我们将类别1(39%)和类别2(27%)标记为“资源最丰富”,类别3(15%)和类别4(15%)标记为“中等”,类别5(5%)标记为“资源最匮乏”,后者在社会经济资源低、产前和围产期生物医学不良因素以及生命最初1000天内不良童年经历方面的可能性最高。与资源最丰富类别(类别2)中的儿童相比,资源最匮乏类别(类别5)中的儿童学业成绩较差(比值比0.13,95%置信区间0.11至0.14),在调整父母教育程度和家庭收入后也是如此(比值比0.20,95%置信区间0.18至0.24)。
生命最初1000天内不同领域风险因素的聚集与12岁时较差的学业成绩相关,这表明在这个关键发育窗口期间在资源有限环境中成长的儿童在充分发挥其发育和教育潜力方面可能面临挑战。如果我们发现与健康相关结果有类似关联,这将进一步强调在生命早期加强多个领域资源以支持长期人类潜力的政策的重要性。