| Literature DB >> 30940913 |
Karen M Eny1, Jonathon L Maguire2,3,4,5,6, David W H Dai2, Gerald Lebovic2,4, Khosrow Adeli7, Jill K Hamilton5,8, Anthony J Hanley6, Muhammad Mamdani9, Brian W McCrindle1,5,10, Mark S Tremblay11, Patricia C Parkin1,4,5, Catherine S Birken12,13,14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30940913 PMCID: PMC6760600 DOI: 10.1038/s41366-019-0345-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Obes (Lond) ISSN: 0307-0565 Impact factor: 5.095
Participant characteristics
|
| Mean (SD) or | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (months)b | 2502 | 44.0 (8.7) |
| SBP (mmHg)b | 2502 | 87 (7.9) |
| Elevated SBPb,c | 2494 | |
| No | 2449 (98.2) | |
| Yes | 45 (1.8) | |
| DBP (mmHg)b | 2502 | 56 (7.5) |
| Elevated DBPb,c | 2494 | |
| No | 2064 (82.8) | |
| Yes | 430 (17.2) | |
| Height (cm)b | 2494 | 100.9 (8.2) |
| Weight (kg)b | 2496 | 16.4 (4.1) |
| zBMIb | 2485 | 0.35 (1.4) |
| Birthweight (kg)d | 2502 | 3.39 (0.51) |
| <2.5 kg | 110 (4.4) | |
| ≥2.5 and <4 kg | 2112 (84.4) | |
| | 280 (11.2) | |
| Breastfeeding duration (months)e | 2321 | 11.1 (7.9) |
| Maternal age (years)d | 2374 | 36.0 (4.5) |
| Maternal ethnicityd | 2351 | |
| European | 1718 (73) | |
| East Asian | 144 (6) | |
| South/Southeast Asian | 180 (8) | |
| Other | 309 (13) | |
| Incomed | 2089 | |
| $0–$39,999 | 123 (5.9) | |
| $40,000–$79,999 | 262 (12.5) | |
| $80,000–$149,999 | 684 (32.7) | |
| $150,000+ | 1020 (48.8) | |
| Maternal educationd | 2433 | |
| College/University | 2215 (91) | |
| High school | 204 (8) | |
| Public school | 14 (1) | |
| Maternal BMId | 2283 | 24.6 (4.6) |
| BMI <30 | 2037 (89) | |
| BMI ≥30 | 246 (11) | |
| Maternal smoking during pregnancyd | 2301 | |
| No | 2272 (99) | |
| Yes | 29 (1) | |
| Gestational high BPd | 2358 | |
| No | 2273 (96) | |
| Yes | 85 (4) | |
| Family history of hypertensiond | 2412 | |
| No | 2327 (96.5) | |
| Yes | 85 (3.5) |
aBased on complete case analysis
bFirst visit when BP was measured
cDefined as SBP ≥90th percentile in the 2017 AAP normative BP tables
dCollected at enrollment
eDetermined using information from the most recent visit for each child
Association of zBMI at birth and rate of zBMI gain in each period with blood pressure (mmHg)
| Systolic blood pressure | Diastolic blood pressure | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unadjustedb | Adjustedb,c | Unadjustedb | Adjustedb,c | |||||
| Period (months)a | β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI |
| zBMI at birthd | −0.04 | (−0.31, 0.23) | 0.04 | (−0.20, 0.28) | 0.06 | (−0.21, 0.32) | 0.15 | (−0.08, 0.37) |
| zBMI gain 0–3 me | 0.5 | (0.19, 0.80) | 0.59 | (0.31, 0.86) | 0.17 | (−0.12, 0.45) | 0.28 | (0.04, 0.53) |
| zBMI gain 3–18 m | 1.15 | (0.85, 1.45) | 0.74 | (0.46, 1.03) | 0.62 | (0.35, 0.88) | 0.44 | (0.20, 0.68) |
| zBMI gain 18–36 m | 0.61 | (0.10, 1.12) | 0.43 | (−0.06, 0.92) | −0.7 | (−1.18, −0.22) | −0.03 | (−0.42, 0.37) |
aEach row shows results from four separate models
bzBMI gain is sequentially conditioned on zBMI at birth and rate of zBMI gain in each period occurring prior to the current period
cAdjusted for age and height at time of BP measures, sex, family income, maternal (education, ethnicity, BMI, hypertension during pregnancy), parental history of hypertension, breastfeeding duration, visit type, and clinic
dNot adjusted for breastfeeding duration
eSince we observed a deceleration of −0.12 zBMI-units per month in the first 3 months (Supplementary Table 1), the interpretation of the positive effect estimate shows that a 1SD-unit slower rate of decrease in zBMI-units from 0–3 months was associated with higher BP (mmHg)
Fig. 1Effect estimate (95% CI) between zBMI gain in each period with BP by birthweight (pinteraction shown). BP blood pressure, mo months
Odds ratio (95% CI) for the association of zBMI at birth and rate of zBMI gain in each period with elevated blood pressure (mmHg)
| Systolic blood pressure | Diastolic blood pressure | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unadjustedb | Adjustedb,c | Unadjustedb | Adjustedb,c | |||||
| Period (months)a | Odds ratio | 95% CI | Odds ratio | 95% CI | Odds ratio | 95% CI | Odds ratio | 95% CI |
| zBMI at birthd | 0.85 | (0.66, 1.11) | 0.92 | (0.71, 1.20) | 1 | (0.90, 1.11) | 1.01 | (0.92, 1.11) |
| zBMI gain 0–3 me | 1.14 | (0.83, 1.54) | 1.55 | (1.18, 2.04) | 1.03 | (0.93, 1.14) | 1.07 | (0.97, 1.18) |
| zBMI gain 3–18 m | 1.91 | (1.47, 2.49) | 1.42 | (1.07, 1.89) | 1.02 | (0.92, 1.13) | 1.04 | (0.94, 1.15) |
| zBMI gain 18–36 m | 0.97 | (0.62, 1.50) | 0.64 | (0.39, 1.05) | 1.11 | (0.92, 1.33) | 1.22 | (1.04, 1.44) |
aEach row shows results from four separate models
bzBMI gain is sequentially conditioned on zBMI at birth and rate of zBMI gain in each period occurring prior to the current period
cAdjusted for family income, maternal (education, ethnicity, BMI, hypertension during pregnancy), parental history of hypertension, breastfeeding duration, visit type, and clinic
dNot adjusted for breastfeeding duration
eSince we observed a deceleration of −0.12 zBMI-units per month in the first 3 months (Supplementary Table 1), the interpretation of the positive effect estimate shows that a 1SD-unit slower rate of decrease in zBMI-units from 0–3 months was associated with a higher odds of elevated BP