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Early life body mass trajectories and mortality in older age: findings from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study

Early life body mass trajectories and mortality in older age: findings from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study
Early life body mass trajectories and mortality in older age: findings from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study
Abstract Background. Overweight and obesity in childhood have been linked to an increased risk of adult mortality, but evidence is still scarce. Methods. We identified trajectories of body mass index (BMI) development in early life and investigated their mortality risk. Data come from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study, in which 4943 individuals, born 1934-1944, had serial measures of weight and height from birth to 11 years extracted from health care records, weight and height data in adulthood, and register-based mortality data for 2000-2010. Results. Three early BMI trajectories (increasing, average, and average-to-low for men and increasing, average, and low-to-high BMI for women) were identified. Women with an increasing or low-to-high BMI (BMI lower in early childhood, later exceeded average) trajectory had an increased risk of all-cause mortality compared to those with an average BMI trajectory (HR 1.55, 95% CI 1.07-2.23; and HR 1.57, 95% CI 1.04-2.37, respectively). Similar associations were observed for cancer mortality. Among men, BMI trajectories were not associated with all-cause mortality, but those with average-to-low BMI (BMI first similar then dropped below average) had an increased risk of cancer mortality. Conclusions. An increasing BMI in early life may shorten the lifespan of maturing cohorts as they age, particularly among women.
aging, birth size, body mass index, developmental origins of adult health and disease, growth mixture models, life-course epidemiology, mortality
0785-3890
34-39
von Bonsdorff, M.B.
87109bb7-0b2f-4db5-8b66-459142573ca3
Tormakangas, T.
a69c21d3-71dd-47b0-91c5-965fbfe59795
Rantanen, T.
9bc8e012-9255-4eb5-8c70-6e619917513e
Salonen, M.K.
376ccd5d-a164-40aa-b0d6-5117ce2e7e56
Osmond, C.
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Kajantie, E.
d4e32f85-9988-4b83-b353-012210ea0151
Eriksson, J.G.
eda300d2-b247-479f-95b9-f12d2c72e92b
von Bonsdorff, M.B.
87109bb7-0b2f-4db5-8b66-459142573ca3
Tormakangas, T.
a69c21d3-71dd-47b0-91c5-965fbfe59795
Rantanen, T.
9bc8e012-9255-4eb5-8c70-6e619917513e
Salonen, M.K.
376ccd5d-a164-40aa-b0d6-5117ce2e7e56
Osmond, C.
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Kajantie, E.
d4e32f85-9988-4b83-b353-012210ea0151
Eriksson, J.G.
eda300d2-b247-479f-95b9-f12d2c72e92b

von Bonsdorff, M.B., Tormakangas, T., Rantanen, T., Salonen, M.K., Osmond, C., Kajantie, E. and Eriksson, J.G. (2015) Early life body mass trajectories and mortality in older age: findings from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study. Annals of Medicine, 47 (1), 34-39. (doi:10.3109/07853890.2014.963664). (PMID:25307361)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Abstract Background. Overweight and obesity in childhood have been linked to an increased risk of adult mortality, but evidence is still scarce. Methods. We identified trajectories of body mass index (BMI) development in early life and investigated their mortality risk. Data come from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study, in which 4943 individuals, born 1934-1944, had serial measures of weight and height from birth to 11 years extracted from health care records, weight and height data in adulthood, and register-based mortality data for 2000-2010. Results. Three early BMI trajectories (increasing, average, and average-to-low for men and increasing, average, and low-to-high BMI for women) were identified. Women with an increasing or low-to-high BMI (BMI lower in early childhood, later exceeded average) trajectory had an increased risk of all-cause mortality compared to those with an average BMI trajectory (HR 1.55, 95% CI 1.07-2.23; and HR 1.57, 95% CI 1.04-2.37, respectively). Similar associations were observed for cancer mortality. Among men, BMI trajectories were not associated with all-cause mortality, but those with average-to-low BMI (BMI first similar then dropped below average) had an increased risk of cancer mortality. Conclusions. An increasing BMI in early life may shorten the lifespan of maturing cohorts as they age, particularly among women.

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More information

Published date: February 2015
Keywords: aging, birth size, body mass index, developmental origins of adult health and disease, growth mixture models, life-course epidemiology, mortality
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 375472
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375472
ISSN: 0785-3890
PURE UUID: e6f2941a-4c51-4431-a70e-8946e86c8c77
ORCID for C. Osmond: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9054-4655

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2015 12:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: M.B. von Bonsdorff
Author: T. Tormakangas
Author: T. Rantanen
Author: M.K. Salonen
Author: C. Osmond ORCID iD
Author: E. Kajantie
Author: J.G. Eriksson

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