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Mediation of the association between maternal pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity and childhood overweight/obesity by birth anthropometry
Author(s) -
Danielle Stevens,
Brian Neelon,
James R. Roberts,
Sarah N. Taylor,
Roger B. Newman,
John E. Vena,
Kelly J. Hunt
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of developmental origins of health and disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.744
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 2040-1752
pISSN - 2040-1744
DOI - 10.1017/s2040174420000033
Subject(s) - overweight , medicine , anthropometry , body mass index , obesity , offspring , pregnancy , birth weight , obstetrics , gestational diabetes , childhood obesity , gestational age , pediatrics , endocrinology , gestation , biology , genetics
The mechanism through which developmental programming of offspring overweight/obesity following in utero exposure to maternal overweight/obesity operates is unknown but may operate through biologic pathways involving offspring anthropometry at birth. Thus, we sought to examine to what extent the association between in utero exposure to maternal overweight/obesity and childhood overweight/obesity is mediated by birth anthropometry. Analyses were conducted on a retrospective cohort with data obtained from one hospital system. A natural effects model framework was used to estimate the natural direct effect and natural indirect effect of birth anthropometry (weight, length, head circumference, ponderal index, and small-for-gestational age [SGA] or large-for-gestational age [LGA]) for the association between pre-pregnancy maternal body mass index (BMI) category (overweight/obese vs normal weight) and offspring overweight/obesity in childhood. Models were adjusted for maternal and child socio-demographics. Three thousand nine hundred and fifty mother-child dyads were included in analyses (1467 [57.8%] of mothers and 913 [34.4%] of children were overweight/obese). Results suggest that a small percentage of the effect of maternal pre-pregnancy BMI overweight/obesity on offspring overweight/obesity operated through offspring anthropometry at birth (weight: 15.5%, length: 5.2%, head circumference: 8.5%, ponderal index: 2.2%, SGA: 2.9%, and LGA: 4.2%). There was a small increase in the percentage mediated when gestational diabetes or hypertensive disorders were added to the models. Our study suggests that some measures of birth anthropometry mediate the association between maternal pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity and offspring overweight/obesity in childhood and that the size of this mediated effect is small.

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