Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysis

Children's body mass index (BMI) growth trajectories are associated with adult health outcomes, and vary by geography and epoch. Understanding these trajectories could help to identify high risk children and thus support improved health outcomes. In this review, we compare and quantitatively an...

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Main Authors: Heather A. Robinson, Rinita Dam, Lamiece Hassan, David Jenkins, Iain Buchan, Matthew Sperrin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-06-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335519300233
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spelling doaj-43b0c94eb71c430c8d0679e1a32024c52020-11-25T01:17:00ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552019-06-0114Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysisHeather A. Robinson0Rinita Dam1Lamiece Hassan2David Jenkins3Iain Buchan4Matthew Sperrin5Farr Institute, University of Manchester, Vaughan House, Portsmouth St, Manchester, M13 9GB, UK; Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK; NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, UKFarr Institute, University of Manchester, Vaughan House, Portsmouth St, Manchester, M13 9GB, UK; Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK; NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, UKFarr Institute, University of Manchester, Vaughan House, Portsmouth St, Manchester, M13 9GB, UK; Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK; NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, UKFarr Institute, University of Manchester, Vaughan House, Portsmouth St, Manchester, M13 9GB, UK; Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK; NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, UKFarr Institute, University of Manchester, Vaughan House, Portsmouth St, Manchester, M13 9GB, UK; Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK; NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, UKCorresponding author.; Farr Institute, University of Manchester, Vaughan House, Portsmouth St, Manchester, M13 9GB, UK; Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK; NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, UKChildren's body mass index (BMI) growth trajectories are associated with adult health outcomes, and vary by geography and epoch. Understanding these trajectories could help to identify high risk children and thus support improved health outcomes. In this review, we compare and quantitatively analyse BMI level and trajectory data published since 2010. We characterise recent growth in children aged 4–11 years, an age range most frequently targeted for BMI intervention, yet less studied than young childhood or infancy.Through searches in OVID, we identified 54 relevant texts which describe either post-2000 summary BMI values by age and gender in cohorts with sample sizes of over 1000 children, or the results of latent class analyses of BMI trajectories within the 4–11 year age range. Population level median growth curves were projected and visualised as weighted means. These BMI curves, based on data from 729,692 children, can be visually clustered into ‘high’ and ‘low’ charting groups with extreme outlying values. Within populations, latent class analyses converge on 3–4 individual child trajectories, two of which predispose adult overweight. These growth pathways diverge early in childhood, yet are not effectively distinguished via isolated BMI measurements taken between 4 and 11 years, meaning some high risk children may currently be poorly identified. Keywords: Body mass index, Pediatric obesity, Child development, Obesityhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335519300233
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather A. Robinson
Rinita Dam
Lamiece Hassan
David Jenkins
Iain Buchan
Matthew Sperrin
spellingShingle Heather A. Robinson
Rinita Dam
Lamiece Hassan
David Jenkins
Iain Buchan
Matthew Sperrin
Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysis
Preventive Medicine Reports
author_facet Heather A. Robinson
Rinita Dam
Lamiece Hassan
David Jenkins
Iain Buchan
Matthew Sperrin
author_sort Heather A. Robinson
title Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysis
title_short Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysis
title_full Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysis
title_fullStr Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysis
title_full_unstemmed Post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: A review and quantitative analysis
title_sort post-2000 growth trajectories in children aged 4–11 years: a review and quantitative analysis
publisher Elsevier
series Preventive Medicine Reports
issn 2211-3355
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Children's body mass index (BMI) growth trajectories are associated with adult health outcomes, and vary by geography and epoch. Understanding these trajectories could help to identify high risk children and thus support improved health outcomes. In this review, we compare and quantitatively analyse BMI level and trajectory data published since 2010. We characterise recent growth in children aged 4–11 years, an age range most frequently targeted for BMI intervention, yet less studied than young childhood or infancy.Through searches in OVID, we identified 54 relevant texts which describe either post-2000 summary BMI values by age and gender in cohorts with sample sizes of over 1000 children, or the results of latent class analyses of BMI trajectories within the 4–11 year age range. Population level median growth curves were projected and visualised as weighted means. These BMI curves, based on data from 729,692 children, can be visually clustered into ‘high’ and ‘low’ charting groups with extreme outlying values. Within populations, latent class analyses converge on 3–4 individual child trajectories, two of which predispose adult overweight. These growth pathways diverge early in childhood, yet are not effectively distinguished via isolated BMI measurements taken between 4 and 11 years, meaning some high risk children may currently be poorly identified. Keywords: Body mass index, Pediatric obesity, Child development, Obesity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335519300233
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