Overweight in infancy: which pre- and perinatal factors determine overweight persistence or reduction? A birth cohort followed for 11 years

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Publication date

2014

Authors

van Rossem, Lenie
Wijga, Alet
Brunekreef, BertISNI 0000000029543122
de Jongste, Johan C
Kerkhof, Marjan
Postma, Dirkje S
Gehring, UlrikeORCID 0000-0003-3612-5780ISNI 0000000097926870
Smit, Henriëtte A

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: A considerable proportion of children with early-life overweight attain a normal weight. To recognize infants at risk of persistent overweight, we compared early-life factors of children with a longitudinal pattern of persistent overweight to children with a pattern of overweight in early but not in later childhood. METHODS: In 3,550 children participating in a birth cohort that started in 1996/1997 in the Netherlands, body mass index was repeatedly assessed until age 11 and dichotomized into with/without overweight. Latent class growth modeling was used to distinguish trajectories. Our analysis was focused on the comparison of early-life factors in children in a persistent overweight pattern with those in an overweight reduction pattern using multivariable log-binomial regression analyses. RESULTS: Children (n = 133) in the persistent overweight pattern were more likely to have overweight parents [relative risk (RR)mother: 1.85, 95% CI: 1.37-2.49: RRfather: 1.75, 95% CI: 1.21-2.55] than children in the overweight reduction pattern (n = 303). Maternal education, child's gender, ethnicity, birth weight, breast-feeding and maternal smoking during pregnancy did not differ between the trajectories. CONCLUSION: Health care practitioners should focus on high-weight infants with overweight parents, as these children are less likely to resolve their overweight. © 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Keywords

Birth cohort, Epidemiology, Early life determinants, Latent class growth curve, Overweight, Trajectory


Citation

van Rossem, L, Wijga, A H, Brunekreef, B, de Jongste, J C, Kerkhof, M, Postma, D S, Gehring, U & Smit, H A 2014, 'Overweight in infancy: which pre- and perinatal factors determine overweight persistence or reduction? A birth cohort followed for 11 years', Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism, vol. 65, no. 2-3, pp. 211-219 . https://doi.org/10.1159/000360305