Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.

Little is known about whether associations between childhood adiposity and later adverse cardiovascular health outcomes are driven by tracking of overweight from childhood to adulthood and/or by vascular and metabolic changes from childhood overweight that persist into adulthood. Our objective is to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laura D Howe, Kate Tilling, Li Benfield, Jennifer Logue, Naveed Sattar, Andy R Ness, George Davey Smith, Debbie A Lawlor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-12-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2999567?pdf=render
id doaj-fd0c8b3b0cc347b9b7ff50c6f8169ed4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fd0c8b3b0cc347b9b7ff50c6f8169ed42020-11-25T02:47:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-12-01512e1518610.1371/journal.pone.0015186Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.Laura D HoweKate TillingLi BenfieldJennifer LogueNaveed SattarAndy R NessGeorge Davey SmithDebbie A LawlorLittle is known about whether associations between childhood adiposity and later adverse cardiovascular health outcomes are driven by tracking of overweight from childhood to adulthood and/or by vascular and metabolic changes from childhood overweight that persist into adulthood. Our objective is to characterise associations between trajectories of adiposity across childhood and a wide range of cardiovascular risk factors measured in adolescence, and explore the extent to which these are mediated by fat mass at age 15.Using data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, we estimated individual trajectories of ponderal index (PI) from 0-2 years and BMI from 2-10 years using random-effects linear spline models (N = 4601). We explored associations between PI/BMI trajectories and DXA-determined total-body fat-mass and cardiovascular risk factors at 15 years (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, fasting LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, C-reactive protein, glucose, insulin) with and without adjustment for confounders. Changes in PI/BMI during all periods of infancy and childhood were associated with greater DXA-determined fat-mass at age 15. BMI changes in childhood, but not PI changes from 0-2 years, were associated with most cardiovascular risk factors in adolescence; associations tended to be strongest for BMI changes in later childhood (ages 8.5-10), and were largely mediated by fat mass at age 15.Changes in PI/BMI from 0-10 years were associated with greater fat-mass at age 15. Greater increases in BMI from age 8.5-10 years are most strongly associated with cardiovascular risk factors at age 15, with much of these associations mediated by fat-mass at this age. We found little evidence supporting previous reports that rapid PI changes in infancy are associated with future cardiovascular risk. This study suggests that associations between early overweight and subsequent adverse cardiovascular health are largely due to overweight children tending to remain overweight.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2999567?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura D Howe
Kate Tilling
Li Benfield
Jennifer Logue
Naveed Sattar
Andy R Ness
George Davey Smith
Debbie A Lawlor
spellingShingle Laura D Howe
Kate Tilling
Li Benfield
Jennifer Logue
Naveed Sattar
Andy R Ness
George Davey Smith
Debbie A Lawlor
Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Laura D Howe
Kate Tilling
Li Benfield
Jennifer Logue
Naveed Sattar
Andy R Ness
George Davey Smith
Debbie A Lawlor
author_sort Laura D Howe
title Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.
title_short Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.
title_full Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.
title_fullStr Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.
title_full_unstemmed Changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.
title_sort changes in ponderal index and body mass index across childhood and their associations with fat mass and cardiovascular risk factors at age 15.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-12-01
description Little is known about whether associations between childhood adiposity and later adverse cardiovascular health outcomes are driven by tracking of overweight from childhood to adulthood and/or by vascular and metabolic changes from childhood overweight that persist into adulthood. Our objective is to characterise associations between trajectories of adiposity across childhood and a wide range of cardiovascular risk factors measured in adolescence, and explore the extent to which these are mediated by fat mass at age 15.Using data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, we estimated individual trajectories of ponderal index (PI) from 0-2 years and BMI from 2-10 years using random-effects linear spline models (N = 4601). We explored associations between PI/BMI trajectories and DXA-determined total-body fat-mass and cardiovascular risk factors at 15 years (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, fasting LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, C-reactive protein, glucose, insulin) with and without adjustment for confounders. Changes in PI/BMI during all periods of infancy and childhood were associated with greater DXA-determined fat-mass at age 15. BMI changes in childhood, but not PI changes from 0-2 years, were associated with most cardiovascular risk factors in adolescence; associations tended to be strongest for BMI changes in later childhood (ages 8.5-10), and were largely mediated by fat mass at age 15.Changes in PI/BMI from 0-10 years were associated with greater fat-mass at age 15. Greater increases in BMI from age 8.5-10 years are most strongly associated with cardiovascular risk factors at age 15, with much of these associations mediated by fat-mass at this age. We found little evidence supporting previous reports that rapid PI changes in infancy are associated with future cardiovascular risk. This study suggests that associations between early overweight and subsequent adverse cardiovascular health are largely due to overweight children tending to remain overweight.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2999567?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT lauradhowe changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
AT katetilling changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
AT libenfield changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
AT jenniferlogue changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
AT naveedsattar changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
AT andyrness changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
AT georgedaveysmith changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
AT debbiealawlor changesinponderalindexandbodymassindexacrosschildhoodandtheirassociationswithfatmassandcardiovascularriskfactorsatage15
_version_ 1724754496448364544