Growth patterns in childhood and adolescence and adult body composition: a pooled analysis of birth cohort studies from five low and middle-income countries (COHORTS collaboration)
Growth patterns in childhood and adolescence and adult body composition: a pooled analysis of birth cohort studies from five low and middle-income countries (COHORTS collaboration)
Objective: we examined associations among serial measures of linear growth and relative weight with adult body composition.
Design: secondary data analysis of prospective birth cohort studies.
Settings: six birth cohorts from Brazil, Guatemala, India, the Philippines and South Africa.
Participants: 4173 individuals followed from birth to ages 22-46 years with complete and valid weight and height at birth, infancy, childhood and adolescence, and body composition in adult life.
Exposures: birth weight and conditional size (standardised residuals of height representing linear growth and of relative weight representing weight increments independent of linear size) in infancy, childhood and adolescence.
Primary outcome measures: body mass index, fat mass index (FMI), fat-free mass index (FFMI), fat mass/fat-free mass ratio (FM/FFM), and waist circumference in young and mid-adulthood.
Results: in pooled analyses, a higher birth weight and relative weight gains in infancy, childhood and adolescence were positively associated with all adult outcomes. Relative weight gains in childhood and adolescence were the strongest predictors of adult body composition (β (95% CI) among men: FMI (childhood: 0.41 (0.26 to 0.55); adolescence: 0.39 (0.27 to 0.50)), FFMI (childhood: 0.50 (0.34 to 0.66); adolescence: 0.43 (0.32 to 0.55)), FM/FFM (childhood: 0.31 (0.16 to 0.47); adolescence: 0.31 (0.19 to 0.43))). Among women, similar patterns were observed, but, effect sizes in adolescence were slightly stronger than in childhood. Conditional height in infancy was positively associated with FMI (men: 0.08 (0.03 to 0.14); women: 0.11 (0.07 to 0.16)). Conditional height in childhood was positively but weakly associated with women's adiposity. Site-specific and sex-stratified analyses showed consistency in the direction of estimates, although there were differences in their magnitude.
Conclusions: prenatal and postnatal relative weight gains were positive predictors of larger body size and increased adiposity in adulthood. A faster linear growth in infancy was a significant but weak predictor of higher adult adiposity.
EPIDEMIOLOGY, NUTRITION & DIETETICS, PUBLIC HEALTH
Poveda, Natalia E.
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Adair, Linda S.
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Martorell, Reynaldo
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Patel, Shivani A.
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Ramirez-Zea, Manuel
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Bhargava, Santosh K.
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Bechayda, Sonny A.
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Carba, Delia B.
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Kroker-Lobos, Maria F.
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Horta, Bernardo Lessa
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Lima, Natalia Peixoto
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Mazariegos, Monica
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Menezes, Ana Maria Baptista
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Norris, Shane A.
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Nyati, Lukhanyo H.
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Richter, Linda M.
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Sachdev, Harshpal
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Wehrmeister, Fernando C.
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Stein, Aryeh D.
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20 February 2024
Poveda, Natalia E.
5c668613-012d-4125-bc77-7e24e8c07c86
Adair, Linda S.
cbc191bc-8c0f-468f-99be-394f8930392d
Martorell, Reynaldo
d120786d-e651-446d-a96a-d175de202d5b
Patel, Shivani A.
7e190add-343b-43e7-be5e-16789150caeb
Ramirez-Zea, Manuel
fc06cfd0-de37-4df6-aa63-5dfbf0d31d43
Bhargava, Santosh K.
3932b4c9-c07d-472c-b54d-622306357475
Bechayda, Sonny A.
f89f9491-5405-41ed-92a5-dd19a56e2a31
Carba, Delia B.
2443187e-7b60-487a-91e2-9557bfe39b8f
Kroker-Lobos, Maria F.
142d9301-f5c3-48cb-9a6c-6f8c0da70aa7
Horta, Bernardo Lessa
3543f017-6cef-46ce-9f36-47019088093c
Lima, Natalia Peixoto
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Mazariegos, Monica
b38f4ad7-ffb1-4c12-9dd4-844df90b1e56
Menezes, Ana Maria Baptista
eaa45b2d-9550-4f9d-8e6f-295186292a62
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Nyati, Lukhanyo H.
18d7ac34-0c97-4f40-9195-5eee0a8ed7ff
Richter, Linda M.
2a818b1f-3798-4e6e-841d-c19bbb74bac2
Sachdev, Harshpal
86c675fa-f58e-4a76-bf55-0972435519ab
Wehrmeister, Fernando C.
cc6eab3d-6066-4b6b-abba-ac07076b5709
Stein, Aryeh D.
5ee08d0c-2313-4d74-bfcf-49e9bfabc36d
Poveda, Natalia E., Adair, Linda S., Martorell, Reynaldo, Patel, Shivani A., Ramirez-Zea, Manuel, Bhargava, Santosh K., Bechayda, Sonny A., Carba, Delia B., Kroker-Lobos, Maria F., Horta, Bernardo Lessa, Lima, Natalia Peixoto, Mazariegos, Monica, Menezes, Ana Maria Baptista, Norris, Shane A., Nyati, Lukhanyo H., Richter, Linda M., Sachdev, Harshpal, Wehrmeister, Fernando C. and Stein, Aryeh D.
(2024)
Growth patterns in childhood and adolescence and adult body composition: a pooled analysis of birth cohort studies from five low and middle-income countries (COHORTS collaboration).
BMJ Open, 13 (3), [e068427].
(doi:10.1136/BMJOPEN-2022-068427).
Abstract
Objective: we examined associations among serial measures of linear growth and relative weight with adult body composition.
Design: secondary data analysis of prospective birth cohort studies.
Settings: six birth cohorts from Brazil, Guatemala, India, the Philippines and South Africa.
Participants: 4173 individuals followed from birth to ages 22-46 years with complete and valid weight and height at birth, infancy, childhood and adolescence, and body composition in adult life.
Exposures: birth weight and conditional size (standardised residuals of height representing linear growth and of relative weight representing weight increments independent of linear size) in infancy, childhood and adolescence.
Primary outcome measures: body mass index, fat mass index (FMI), fat-free mass index (FFMI), fat mass/fat-free mass ratio (FM/FFM), and waist circumference in young and mid-adulthood.
Results: in pooled analyses, a higher birth weight and relative weight gains in infancy, childhood and adolescence were positively associated with all adult outcomes. Relative weight gains in childhood and adolescence were the strongest predictors of adult body composition (β (95% CI) among men: FMI (childhood: 0.41 (0.26 to 0.55); adolescence: 0.39 (0.27 to 0.50)), FFMI (childhood: 0.50 (0.34 to 0.66); adolescence: 0.43 (0.32 to 0.55)), FM/FFM (childhood: 0.31 (0.16 to 0.47); adolescence: 0.31 (0.19 to 0.43))). Among women, similar patterns were observed, but, effect sizes in adolescence were slightly stronger than in childhood. Conditional height in infancy was positively associated with FMI (men: 0.08 (0.03 to 0.14); women: 0.11 (0.07 to 0.16)). Conditional height in childhood was positively but weakly associated with women's adiposity. Site-specific and sex-stratified analyses showed consistency in the direction of estimates, although there were differences in their magnitude.
Conclusions: prenatal and postnatal relative weight gains were positive predictors of larger body size and increased adiposity in adulthood. A faster linear growth in infancy was a significant but weak predictor of higher adult adiposity.
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Submitted date: 25 September 2022
Accepted/In Press date: 22 February 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2023
Published date: 20 February 2024
Keywords:
EPIDEMIOLOGY, NUTRITION & DIETETICS, PUBLIC HEALTH
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496962
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496962
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 8fb62bbe-5e8e-41dd-a9d2-6120403f2278
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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 15:37
Last modified: 11 Jan 2025 02:59
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Contributors
Author:
Natalia E. Poveda
Author:
Linda S. Adair
Author:
Reynaldo Martorell
Author:
Shivani A. Patel
Author:
Manuel Ramirez-Zea
Author:
Santosh K. Bhargava
Author:
Sonny A. Bechayda
Author:
Delia B. Carba
Author:
Maria F. Kroker-Lobos
Author:
Bernardo Lessa Horta
Author:
Natalia Peixoto Lima
Author:
Monica Mazariegos
Author:
Ana Maria Baptista Menezes
Author:
Lukhanyo H. Nyati
Author:
Linda M. Richter
Author:
Harshpal Sachdev
Author:
Fernando C. Wehrmeister
Author:
Aryeh D. Stein
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