TY - JOUR
T1 - Fetal and early life growth and body mass index from birth to early adulthood in 1958 British cohort
T2 - Longitudinal study
AU - Parsons, Tessa J.
AU - Power, Chris
AU - Manor, Orly
PY - 2001/12/8
Y1 - 2001/12/8
N2 - Objectives: To determine the influence of birth weight on body mass index at different stages of later life; whether this relation persists after accounting for potential confounding factors; and the role of indicators of fetal growth (birth weight relative to parental size) and childhood growth. Design: Longitudinal study of the 1958 British birth cohort. Setting: England, Scotland, and Wales. Participants: All singletons born 3–9 March 1958 (10 683 participants with data available at age 33). Main outcome measures: Body mass index at ages 7, 11, 16, 23, and 33 years. Results: The relation between birth weight and body mass index was positive and weak, becoming more J shaped with increasing age. When adjustments were made for maternal weight, there was no relation between birth weight and body mass index at age 33. Indicators of poor fetal growth based on the mother's body size were not predictive, but the risk of adult obesity was higher among participants who had grown to a greater proportion of their eventual adult height by age 7. In men only, the effect of childhood growth was strongest in those with lower birth weights and, to a lesser extent, those born to lighter mothers. Conclusions: Maternal weight (or body mass index) largely explains the association between birth weight and adult body mass index, and it may be a more important risk factor for obesity in the child than birth weight. Birth weight and maternal weight seem to modify the effect of childhood linear growth on adult obesity in men. Intergenerational associations between the mother's and her offspring's body mass index seem to underlie the well documented association between birth weight and body mass index. Other measures of fetal growth are needed for a fuller understanding of the role of the intrauterine environment in the development of obesity. Birth weight has been shown to be positively related to subsequent fatness Few studies have investigated whether this relation is confounded by other factors, such as parental size Birth weight may be an inadequate indicator of the intrauterine environment The relation between birth weight and adult body mass index was largely accounted for by mother's weight Fetal growth indexed by birth weight relative to parental body size was unrelated to adult obesity Rapid linear growth in childhood increased the risk of obesity in adulthood, especially in males with low birth weight Among boys who grew rapidly, the risk of obesity in adulthood was similar for both lower and higher birth weights.
AB - Objectives: To determine the influence of birth weight on body mass index at different stages of later life; whether this relation persists after accounting for potential confounding factors; and the role of indicators of fetal growth (birth weight relative to parental size) and childhood growth. Design: Longitudinal study of the 1958 British birth cohort. Setting: England, Scotland, and Wales. Participants: All singletons born 3–9 March 1958 (10 683 participants with data available at age 33). Main outcome measures: Body mass index at ages 7, 11, 16, 23, and 33 years. Results: The relation between birth weight and body mass index was positive and weak, becoming more J shaped with increasing age. When adjustments were made for maternal weight, there was no relation between birth weight and body mass index at age 33. Indicators of poor fetal growth based on the mother's body size were not predictive, but the risk of adult obesity was higher among participants who had grown to a greater proportion of their eventual adult height by age 7. In men only, the effect of childhood growth was strongest in those with lower birth weights and, to a lesser extent, those born to lighter mothers. Conclusions: Maternal weight (or body mass index) largely explains the association between birth weight and adult body mass index, and it may be a more important risk factor for obesity in the child than birth weight. Birth weight and maternal weight seem to modify the effect of childhood linear growth on adult obesity in men. Intergenerational associations between the mother's and her offspring's body mass index seem to underlie the well documented association between birth weight and body mass index. Other measures of fetal growth are needed for a fuller understanding of the role of the intrauterine environment in the development of obesity. Birth weight has been shown to be positively related to subsequent fatness Few studies have investigated whether this relation is confounded by other factors, such as parental size Birth weight may be an inadequate indicator of the intrauterine environment The relation between birth weight and adult body mass index was largely accounted for by mother's weight Fetal growth indexed by birth weight relative to parental body size was unrelated to adult obesity Rapid linear growth in childhood increased the risk of obesity in adulthood, especially in males with low birth weight Among boys who grew rapidly, the risk of obesity in adulthood was similar for both lower and higher birth weights.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0035830040&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1136/bmj.323.7325.1331
DO - 10.1136/bmj.323.7325.1331
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C2 - 11739217
AN - SCOPUS:0035830040
SN - 0959-8138
VL - 323
SP - 1331
EP - 1335
JO - BMJ
JF - BMJ
IS - 7325
ER -