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Dietary inflammation and childhood adiposity: analysis of individual participant data from six birth cohorts.

Dietary inflammation and childhood adiposity: analysis of individual participant data from six birth cohorts.
Dietary inflammation and childhood adiposity: analysis of individual participant data from six birth cohorts.
Background & aims: childhood adiposity and inflammation impact long-term health. However, associations between dietary inflammation and childhood adiposity are unclear. We investigated if more pro-inflammatory diets are associated with greater adiposity in early-, mid-, and late-childhood.

Methods: we pooled individual participant data (IPD) from 13,978 children in six European birth cohorts in the ALPHABET consortium: Lifeways Cross-Generation Cohort Study (Lifeways), the Randomised cOntrol trial of LOw glycaemic index diet during pregnancy study (ROLO), the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), the Southampton Women's Survey (SWS), the Polish Mother and Child Cohort (REPRO_PL), and The Generation R Study (Generation R). Dietary inflammation was determined using the Children's Dietary Inflammatory Index (C-DII™). Adiposity-related outcomes included BMI z-score (primary outcome), abdominal circumference, skinfolds, fat-mass- and fat-free-mass-indices (secondary outcomes). Two-stage random effects IPD meta-analysis (IPD-MA), with adjusted linear and logistic regression models, was conducted. Quantile regression (QR) examined C-DII associations with BMI z-score percentiles.

Results: median, 25th and 75th percentile C-DII scores trended upwards from early 0.18 (−0.65, 1.03) to late-childhood 0.51 (−0.40, 1.49). Pooled QR revealed positive C-DII associations across BMI z-score percentiles, particularly in late-childhood unadjusted β (95 % CI) 75th (0.075 (0.046, 0.105), p < 0.001); 85th (0.077 (0.045, 0.108), p < 0.001); and 95th (0.051 (0.011, 0.091), p = 0.01). Adjusted cohort-specific QR identified contrasting associations at early-childhood (ALSPAC and SWS) and late-childhood (Generation R). Pooled adjusted IPD-MA showed C-DII associations with late-childhood obesity [OR (95 % CI) 0.89 (0.81, 0.97), p = 0.01].

Conclusions: C-DII associations across BMI z-score distribution varied by cohort, quantile, and time-point, with some potentially explained by adiposity rebound, reverse causation and questionnaire response biases, highlighting insights not evident with linear regression.
Birth cohort, C-DII, Child nutrition sciences, Dietary inflammation, Obesity
0261-5614
223-233
Vingrys, Kristina
84be94d8-441a-4b98-8efe-ce1f5e8d0950
Herbert, James R.
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Chen, Ling-Wei
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Crozier, Sarah
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Duijts, Liesbeth
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Harvey, Nicholas
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Jaddoe, Vincent W. V.
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Kelleher, Cecily
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McAuliffe, Fionnuala M.
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Polanska, Kinga
974b98b8-9e2a-42db-aa85-ad3fb4ce7b5a
Suderman, Matthew
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Jerzynska, Joanna
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Bottai, Matteo
a7111b51-c143-49b9-9e00-af901a5b34ff
Segurado, Ricardo
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Phillips, Catherine M.
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Vingrys, Kristina
84be94d8-441a-4b98-8efe-ce1f5e8d0950
Herbert, James R.
d19acd4a-4f86-4fdf-858e-a178f7d8dc00
Chen, Ling-Wei
63214617-9cfc-4633-85cb-a161297130a5
Crozier, Sarah
9c3595ce-45b0-44fa-8c4c-4c555e628a03
Duijts, Liesbeth
9af3d956-5a40-4cd7-badd-542639c84460
Harvey, Nicholas
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Jaddoe, Vincent W. V.
839dd407-127e-49dc-aeba-bdc78be1eccb
Kelleher, Cecily
c7e516cd-6070-4173-9b38-a68130e91b18
McAuliffe, Fionnuala M.
4338a5d7-8afc-4565-8edc-6c9928311c47
Polanska, Kinga
974b98b8-9e2a-42db-aa85-ad3fb4ce7b5a
Suderman, Matthew
404b6081-e1ce-4419-af87-3e19bad2322e
Jerzynska, Joanna
814994be-c2bf-4508-956d-cb87aa6a6c18
Bottai, Matteo
a7111b51-c143-49b9-9e00-af901a5b34ff
Segurado, Ricardo
974ee9dc-34fe-44bf-aa1c-039039f7c647
Phillips, Catherine M.
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Vingrys, Kristina, Herbert, James R., Chen, Ling-Wei, Crozier, Sarah, Duijts, Liesbeth, Harvey, Nicholas, Jaddoe, Vincent W. V., Kelleher, Cecily, McAuliffe, Fionnuala M., Polanska, Kinga, Suderman, Matthew, Jerzynska, Joanna, Bottai, Matteo, Segurado, Ricardo and Phillips, Catherine M. (2025) Dietary inflammation and childhood adiposity: analysis of individual participant data from six birth cohorts. Clinical Nutrition, 45, 223-233. (doi:10.1016/j.clnu.2024.12.023).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background & aims: childhood adiposity and inflammation impact long-term health. However, associations between dietary inflammation and childhood adiposity are unclear. We investigated if more pro-inflammatory diets are associated with greater adiposity in early-, mid-, and late-childhood.

Methods: we pooled individual participant data (IPD) from 13,978 children in six European birth cohorts in the ALPHABET consortium: Lifeways Cross-Generation Cohort Study (Lifeways), the Randomised cOntrol trial of LOw glycaemic index diet during pregnancy study (ROLO), the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), the Southampton Women's Survey (SWS), the Polish Mother and Child Cohort (REPRO_PL), and The Generation R Study (Generation R). Dietary inflammation was determined using the Children's Dietary Inflammatory Index (C-DII™). Adiposity-related outcomes included BMI z-score (primary outcome), abdominal circumference, skinfolds, fat-mass- and fat-free-mass-indices (secondary outcomes). Two-stage random effects IPD meta-analysis (IPD-MA), with adjusted linear and logistic regression models, was conducted. Quantile regression (QR) examined C-DII associations with BMI z-score percentiles.

Results: median, 25th and 75th percentile C-DII scores trended upwards from early 0.18 (−0.65, 1.03) to late-childhood 0.51 (−0.40, 1.49). Pooled QR revealed positive C-DII associations across BMI z-score percentiles, particularly in late-childhood unadjusted β (95 % CI) 75th (0.075 (0.046, 0.105), p < 0.001); 85th (0.077 (0.045, 0.108), p < 0.001); and 95th (0.051 (0.011, 0.091), p = 0.01). Adjusted cohort-specific QR identified contrasting associations at early-childhood (ALSPAC and SWS) and late-childhood (Generation R). Pooled adjusted IPD-MA showed C-DII associations with late-childhood obesity [OR (95 % CI) 0.89 (0.81, 0.97), p = 0.01].

Conclusions: C-DII associations across BMI z-score distribution varied by cohort, quantile, and time-point, with some potentially explained by adiposity rebound, reverse causation and questionnaire response biases, highlighting insights not evident with linear regression.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 January 2025
Published date: 20 January 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2025 Elsevier Ltd and European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism
Keywords: Birth cohort, C-DII, Child nutrition sciences, Dietary inflammation, Obesity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497771
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497771
ISSN: 0261-5614
PURE UUID: 3bd44919-a19a-459f-ba59-f76a64726782
ORCID for Sarah Crozier: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9524-1127
ORCID for Nicholas Harvey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8194-2512

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Date deposited: 30 Jan 2025 18:00
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 01:52

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Contributors

Author: Kristina Vingrys
Author: James R. Herbert
Author: Ling-Wei Chen
Author: Sarah Crozier ORCID iD
Author: Liesbeth Duijts
Author: Nicholas Harvey ORCID iD
Author: Vincent W. V. Jaddoe
Author: Cecily Kelleher
Author: Fionnuala M. McAuliffe
Author: Kinga Polanska
Author: Matthew Suderman
Author: Joanna Jerzynska
Author: Matteo Bottai
Author: Ricardo Segurado
Author: Catherine M. Phillips

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