The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Does initial breastfeeding lead to lower blood cholesterol in adult life? A quantitative review of the evidence

Does initial breastfeeding lead to lower blood cholesterol in adult life? A quantitative review of the evidence
Does initial breastfeeding lead to lower blood cholesterol in adult life? A quantitative review of the evidence
BACKGROUND: Earlier studies have suggested that infant feeding may program long-term changes in cholesterol metabolism. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to examine whether breastfeeding is associated with lower blood cholesterol concentrations in adulthood. DESIGN: The study consisted of a systematic review of published observational studies relating initial infant feeding status to blood cholesterol concentrations in adulthood (ie, aged >16 y). Data were available from 17 studies (17 498 subjects; 12 890 breastfed, 4608 formula-fed). Mean differences in total cholesterol concentrations (breastfed minus formula-fed) were pooled by using fixed-effect models. Effects of adjustment (for age at outcome, socioeconomic position, body mass index, and smoking status) and exclusion (of nonexclusive breast feeders) were examined. RESULTS: Mean total blood cholesterol was lower (P = 0.037) among those ever breastfed than among those fed formula milk (mean difference: -0.04 mmol/L; 95% CI: -0.08, 0.00 mmol/L). The difference in cholesterol between infant feeding groups was larger (P = 0.005) and more consistent in 7 studies that analyzed "exclusive" feeding patterns (-0.15 mmol/L; -0.23, -0.06 mmol/L) than in 10 studies that analyzed nonexclusive feeding patterns (-0.01 mmol/L; -0.06, 0.03 mmol/L). Adjustment for potential confounders including socioeconomic position, body mass index, and smoking status in adult life had minimal effect on these estimates. CONCLUSIONS: Initial breastfeeding (particularly when exclusive) may be associated with lower blood cholesterol concentrations in later life. Moves to reduce the cholesterol content of formula feeds below those of breast milk should be treated with caution
blood, metabolism, socioeconomic factors, health, infant, age, breast-milk, research, longitudinal studies, milk, infant food, infant nutritional physiological phenomena, risk factors, male, humans, adolescent, later life, middle aged, review, community, united-kingdom, infant formula, epidemiology, newborn, smoking, mass, life, odds ratio, patterns, body mass index, physiology, breast feeding, adult, hypercholesterolemia, female, aged, confounding factors (epidemiology), human, cholesterol
0002-9165
305-314
Owen, Christopher G.
e25252a5-c310-4ba4-a111-9bf168261b50
Whincup, Peter H.
b2f4a9dd-9b42-4f44-b078-575d5d9da0dc
Kaye, Samantha J.
e412e31d-32f3-4b58-a226-3ee57139e362
Martin, Richard M.
ce5c4184-4432-4435-bd1e-221f665d42d8
Davey Smith, George
0de6af8f-976a-477d-a944-a98d0c8c1ebb
Cook, Derek G.
0e13cfdc-c3f8-4f3f-834a-858c2a0c34cc
Bergstrom, Erik
7c40f0d2-4b77-4fd7-a773-bc2b2172890c
Black, Stephanie
309359ec-86f3-40ef-9b64-da17438ad398
Wadsworth, Michael E.J.
168140c7-7ea8-49f5-8cc2-2d62cd70f3dd
Fall, Caroline H.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Freudenheim, Jo L.
e396c3d2-f656-4db3-a2dc-837160b42173
Nie, Jing
fc0173f9-6100-40a1-819d-d4b15fd03432
Huxley, Rachel R.
46bd2821-ae0b-44e1-99a3-5ea44f389fbb
Kolacek, Sanja
472ca76d-2380-45aa-b1d5-b16a1500c450
Leeson, C. Paul
11fd58d7-51f6-48ff-a4f7-8d64ed7eab5a
Pearce, Mark S.
b50b01fe-e8a4-4484-8539-3bdeba5d79d9
Raitakari, Olli T.
6cf56ed9-a97a-45b6-8722-0aacc3e85f73
Lisinen, Irina
c5dc2b6b-a8a7-476c-b79f-615de2d53c2a
Viikari, Jorma S.
68bb39bb-54e2-437f-9bee-48a6682de962
Ravelli, Anita C.
2c50a713-6e56-4530-9636-9146598f92c3
Rudnicka, Alicja R.
5d9ac203-8ca7-407e-b1ad-53c66c1a2dad
Strachan, David P.
76ddbacc-b6cb-48db-8ab6-77f799c8d1c8
Williams, Sheila M.
a90bb10f-6a30-4c91-afcd-8b4bab2a9d38
Owen, Christopher G.
e25252a5-c310-4ba4-a111-9bf168261b50
Whincup, Peter H.
b2f4a9dd-9b42-4f44-b078-575d5d9da0dc
Kaye, Samantha J.
e412e31d-32f3-4b58-a226-3ee57139e362
Martin, Richard M.
ce5c4184-4432-4435-bd1e-221f665d42d8
Davey Smith, George
0de6af8f-976a-477d-a944-a98d0c8c1ebb
Cook, Derek G.
0e13cfdc-c3f8-4f3f-834a-858c2a0c34cc
Bergstrom, Erik
7c40f0d2-4b77-4fd7-a773-bc2b2172890c
Black, Stephanie
309359ec-86f3-40ef-9b64-da17438ad398
Wadsworth, Michael E.J.
168140c7-7ea8-49f5-8cc2-2d62cd70f3dd
Fall, Caroline H.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Freudenheim, Jo L.
e396c3d2-f656-4db3-a2dc-837160b42173
Nie, Jing
fc0173f9-6100-40a1-819d-d4b15fd03432
Huxley, Rachel R.
46bd2821-ae0b-44e1-99a3-5ea44f389fbb
Kolacek, Sanja
472ca76d-2380-45aa-b1d5-b16a1500c450
Leeson, C. Paul
11fd58d7-51f6-48ff-a4f7-8d64ed7eab5a
Pearce, Mark S.
b50b01fe-e8a4-4484-8539-3bdeba5d79d9
Raitakari, Olli T.
6cf56ed9-a97a-45b6-8722-0aacc3e85f73
Lisinen, Irina
c5dc2b6b-a8a7-476c-b79f-615de2d53c2a
Viikari, Jorma S.
68bb39bb-54e2-437f-9bee-48a6682de962
Ravelli, Anita C.
2c50a713-6e56-4530-9636-9146598f92c3
Rudnicka, Alicja R.
5d9ac203-8ca7-407e-b1ad-53c66c1a2dad
Strachan, David P.
76ddbacc-b6cb-48db-8ab6-77f799c8d1c8
Williams, Sheila M.
a90bb10f-6a30-4c91-afcd-8b4bab2a9d38

Owen, Christopher G., Whincup, Peter H., Kaye, Samantha J., Martin, Richard M., Davey Smith, George, Cook, Derek G., Bergstrom, Erik, Black, Stephanie, Wadsworth, Michael E.J., Fall, Caroline H., Freudenheim, Jo L., Nie, Jing, Huxley, Rachel R., Kolacek, Sanja, Leeson, C. Paul, Pearce, Mark S., Raitakari, Olli T., Lisinen, Irina, Viikari, Jorma S., Ravelli, Anita C., Rudnicka, Alicja R., Strachan, David P. and Williams, Sheila M. (2008) Does initial breastfeeding lead to lower blood cholesterol in adult life? A quantitative review of the evidence. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 88 (2), 305-314. (doi:10.3945/ajcn.2008.26943).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Earlier studies have suggested that infant feeding may program long-term changes in cholesterol metabolism. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to examine whether breastfeeding is associated with lower blood cholesterol concentrations in adulthood. DESIGN: The study consisted of a systematic review of published observational studies relating initial infant feeding status to blood cholesterol concentrations in adulthood (ie, aged >16 y). Data were available from 17 studies (17 498 subjects; 12 890 breastfed, 4608 formula-fed). Mean differences in total cholesterol concentrations (breastfed minus formula-fed) were pooled by using fixed-effect models. Effects of adjustment (for age at outcome, socioeconomic position, body mass index, and smoking status) and exclusion (of nonexclusive breast feeders) were examined. RESULTS: Mean total blood cholesterol was lower (P = 0.037) among those ever breastfed than among those fed formula milk (mean difference: -0.04 mmol/L; 95% CI: -0.08, 0.00 mmol/L). The difference in cholesterol between infant feeding groups was larger (P = 0.005) and more consistent in 7 studies that analyzed "exclusive" feeding patterns (-0.15 mmol/L; -0.23, -0.06 mmol/L) than in 10 studies that analyzed nonexclusive feeding patterns (-0.01 mmol/L; -0.06, 0.03 mmol/L). Adjustment for potential confounders including socioeconomic position, body mass index, and smoking status in adult life had minimal effect on these estimates. CONCLUSIONS: Initial breastfeeding (particularly when exclusive) may be associated with lower blood cholesterol concentrations in later life. Moves to reduce the cholesterol content of formula feeds below those of breast milk should be treated with caution

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: August 2008
Additional Information: Original research communication
Keywords: blood, metabolism, socioeconomic factors, health, infant, age, breast-milk, research, longitudinal studies, milk, infant food, infant nutritional physiological phenomena, risk factors, male, humans, adolescent, later life, middle aged, review, community, united-kingdom, infant formula, epidemiology, newborn, smoking, mass, life, odds ratio, patterns, body mass index, physiology, breast feeding, adult, hypercholesterolemia, female, aged, confounding factors (epidemiology), human, cholesterol

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 70492
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/70492
ISSN: 0002-9165
PURE UUID: cd9d5de3-7139-4361-b78e-684f04144242
ORCID for Caroline H. Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Feb 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:34

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Christopher G. Owen
Author: Peter H. Whincup
Author: Samantha J. Kaye
Author: Richard M. Martin
Author: George Davey Smith
Author: Derek G. Cook
Author: Erik Bergstrom
Author: Stephanie Black
Author: Michael E.J. Wadsworth
Author: Jo L. Freudenheim
Author: Jing Nie
Author: Rachel R. Huxley
Author: Sanja Kolacek
Author: C. Paul Leeson
Author: Mark S. Pearce
Author: Olli T. Raitakari
Author: Irina Lisinen
Author: Jorma S. Viikari
Author: Anita C. Ravelli
Author: Alicja R. Rudnicka
Author: David P. Strachan
Author: Sheila M. Williams

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×