An intergenerational life-course approach to address early childhood obesity and adiposity: the Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI)
An intergenerational life-course approach to address early childhood obesity and adiposity: the Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI)
Background: interactions between genes and early-life exposures during conception, fetal life, infancy, and early childhood have been shown to affect an individual's health later in life. Maternal undernutrition and obesity, gestational diabetes, and impaired growth in utero and in early life are associated with adiposity and overweight and obesity in childhood, which are risk factors for poor health trajectories and non-communicable diseases. In Canada, China, India, and South Africa, 10-30% of children aged 5-16 years are overweight or obese.
Methods: the application of developmental origins of health and disease principles offers a novel approach to prevention of overweight and obesity and reduction of adiposity by delivering integrated interventions across the life course, starting before conception and continuing through early childhood. The Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI) was established in 2017 through a unique collaboration between national funding agencies in Canada, China, India, South Africa, and WHO. The aim of HeLTI is to evaluate the effect of an integrated four-phase intervention starting preconceptionally and continuing through pregnancy, infancy, and early childhood on reducing childhood adiposity (fat mass index) and overweight and obesity, and optimising early child development, nutrition, and other healthy behaviours.
Findings: approximately 22 000 women are being recruited in Shanghai (China), Mysore (India), Soweto (South Africa), and across various provinces of Canada. Women who conceive (an expected 10 000) and their children will be followed up until the child reaches the age of 5 years.
Interpretation: HeLTI has harmonised the intervention, measures, tools, biospecimen collection, and analysis plans for the trial to be run across four countries. HeLTI will help establish whether an intervention aimed at addressing maternal health behaviours, nutrition, and weight; providing psychosocial support to reduce maternal stress and prevent mental illness; optimising infant nutrition, physical activity, and sleep; and promoting parenting skills can reduce the intergenerational risk of excess childhood adiposity and overweight and obesity across diverse settings.
Funding: Canadian Institutes of Health Research; National Science Foundation of China; Department of Biotechnology, India; and South African Medical Research Council.
Child, Infant, Pregnancy, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Pediatric Obesity/epidemiology, Adiposity, Overweight/epidemiology, Life Change Events, Canada/epidemiology, China/epidemiology, South Africa
S15-S15
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
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Birken, Catherine
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Baillargeon, Jean-Patrice
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Dennis, Cindy-Lee
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Fraser, William D.
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Huang, Hefeng
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Fan, Jianxia
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Lye, Stephen
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Matthews, Stephen G.
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Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
2 March 2023
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
de6f872c-7339-4a52-be84-e3bbae707744
Birken, Catherine
9ab5d97e-3258-482a-97f4-764abe91b7e8
Baillargeon, Jean-Patrice
d190c715-c7e7-4cca-a8d9-20b4155d60a2
Dennis, Cindy-Lee
76dd19d8-54fd-4093-95fe-73fdca266831
Fraser, William D.
82e0b6be-d227-4e83-b61e-e66231131615
Huang, Hefeng
ff1d2b75-dd6e-4c1b-ba10-d7d7384bcebe
Fan, Jianxia
edd10619-711b-4db3-9b10-a641777ac338
Lye, Stephen
7bd9fd30-9358-42fb-a3f3-96de294d1dca
Matthews, Stephen G.
c014a3e1-757b-4727-b228-4554200e32f6
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman, Birken, Catherine, Baillargeon, Jean-Patrice, Dennis, Cindy-Lee, Fraser, William D., Huang, Hefeng, Fan, Jianxia, Lye, Stephen, Matthews, Stephen G. and Norris, Shane A.
(2023)
An intergenerational life-course approach to address early childhood obesity and adiposity: the Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI).
The Lancet Global Health, 11 (Supplement 1), .
(doi:10.1016/S2214-109X(23)00098-0).
Abstract
Background: interactions between genes and early-life exposures during conception, fetal life, infancy, and early childhood have been shown to affect an individual's health later in life. Maternal undernutrition and obesity, gestational diabetes, and impaired growth in utero and in early life are associated with adiposity and overweight and obesity in childhood, which are risk factors for poor health trajectories and non-communicable diseases. In Canada, China, India, and South Africa, 10-30% of children aged 5-16 years are overweight or obese.
Methods: the application of developmental origins of health and disease principles offers a novel approach to prevention of overweight and obesity and reduction of adiposity by delivering integrated interventions across the life course, starting before conception and continuing through early childhood. The Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI) was established in 2017 through a unique collaboration between national funding agencies in Canada, China, India, South Africa, and WHO. The aim of HeLTI is to evaluate the effect of an integrated four-phase intervention starting preconceptionally and continuing through pregnancy, infancy, and early childhood on reducing childhood adiposity (fat mass index) and overweight and obesity, and optimising early child development, nutrition, and other healthy behaviours.
Findings: approximately 22 000 women are being recruited in Shanghai (China), Mysore (India), Soweto (South Africa), and across various provinces of Canada. Women who conceive (an expected 10 000) and their children will be followed up until the child reaches the age of 5 years.
Interpretation: HeLTI has harmonised the intervention, measures, tools, biospecimen collection, and analysis plans for the trial to be run across four countries. HeLTI will help establish whether an intervention aimed at addressing maternal health behaviours, nutrition, and weight; providing psychosocial support to reduce maternal stress and prevent mental illness; optimising infant nutrition, physical activity, and sleep; and promoting parenting skills can reduce the intergenerational risk of excess childhood adiposity and overweight and obesity across diverse settings.
Funding: Canadian Institutes of Health Research; National Science Foundation of China; Department of Biotechnology, India; and South African Medical Research Council.
Text
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e-pub ahead of print date: 2 March 2023
Published date: 2 March 2023
Keywords:
Child, Infant, Pregnancy, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Pediatric Obesity/epidemiology, Adiposity, Overweight/epidemiology, Life Change Events, Canada/epidemiology, China/epidemiology, South Africa
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 491879
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491879
ISSN: 2214-109X
PURE UUID: d0968b0c-8026-4ba2-96f8-ba6bc015863e
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Date deposited: 04 Jul 2024 17:58
Last modified: 15 Aug 2024 02:12
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Contributors
Author:
Catherine Birken
Author:
Jean-Patrice Baillargeon
Author:
Cindy-Lee Dennis
Author:
William D. Fraser
Author:
Hefeng Huang
Author:
Jianxia Fan
Author:
Stephen Lye
Author:
Stephen G. Matthews
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