| Literature DB >> 35821522 |
Pär Andersson White1,2, Yara Abu Awad3, Lise Gauvin4,5, Nicholas James Spencer6, Jennifer J McGrath3, Susan A Clifford7,8, Béatrice Nikiema5,9, Junwen Yang-Huang10,11, Jeremy D Goldhaber-Fiebert12, Wolfgang Markham6, Fiona K Mensah7,8, Amy van Grieken11, Hein Raat11, V W V Jaddoe10,13,14, Johnny Ludvigsson15,16, Tomas Faresjö17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35821522 PMCID: PMC9395266 DOI: 10.1038/s41366-022-01171-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Obes (Lond) ISSN: 0307-0565 Impact factor: 5.551
Sample characteristics of maternal education, household income, and confounding variables by cohort.
| ABIS Sweden | QLSCD Quebec | GenR Netherlands | NLSCY Canada | LSAC-B Australia | MCS UK | USNLSY USA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child Weight Status at Follow-Upa ( | |||||||
| Not obese | 2750 (69.0%) | 935 (70.1%) | 4663 (63.1%) | 782 (57.7%) | 3072 (75.2%) | 9434 (72.3%) | 1588 (43.4%) |
| Overweight | 410 (10.3%) | 244 (18.3%) | 817 (11.1%) | 262 (19.3%) | 661 (16.2%) | 2740 (21.0%) | 556 (15.2%) |
| Obese | 77 (1.9%) | 85 (6.4%) | 206 (2.8%) | 99 (7.3%) | 265 (6.5%) | 872 (6.7%) | 401 (11.0%) |
| Missing | 747 (18.8%) | 70 (5.2%) | 1707 (23.1%) | 213 (15.7%) | 87 (2.1%) | 0 | 1112 (30.4%) |
| Maternal Education at Baselineb ( | |||||||
| High | 1590 (39.9%) | 463 (34.7%) | 3191 (43.2%) | 567 (41.8%) | 1481 (36.3%) | 4083 (31.3%) | 1073 (29.3%) |
| Middle | 2162 (54.3%) | 536 (40.2%) | 2035 (27.5%) | 568 (41.9%) | 2202 (53.9%) | 5412 (41.5%) | 1922 (52.6%) |
| Low | 187 (4.7%) | 336 (25.1%) | 1488 (20.1%) | 187 (13.8%) | 400 (9.8%) | 3068 (23.5%) | 657 (18.0%) |
| Missing | 45 (1.1%) | 0 | 679 (9.2%) | 34 (2.5%) | 2 (0.1%) | 483 (3.7%) | 5 (0.01%) |
| Household Income at Baselinec ( | |||||||
| High | 912 (22.9%) | 286 (21.4%) | 1287 (17.4%) | 365 (26.9%) | 883 (21.6%) | 2251 (17.3%) | 570 (15.6%) |
| Middle | 2471 (62.0%) | 782 (58.6%) | 2997 (40.5%) | 874 (64.5%) | 2524 (61.8%) | 7523 (57.7%) | 1581 (43.2%) |
| Low | 597 (15.0%) | 210 (15.7%) | 1216 (16.4%) | 117 (8.6%) | 678 (16.6%) | 2775 (21.3%) | 825 (22.6%) |
| Missing | 4 (0.1%) | 56 (4.2%) | 1893 (25.6%) | 0 | 0 | 497 (3.8%) | 681 (18.6%) |
| Child sex ( | |||||||
| Male | 2101 (52.7%) | 635 (47.6%) | 3707 (50.1%) | 687 (50.7%) | 2096 (51.3%) | 6592 (50.5%) | 1881 (51.4%) |
| Female | 1883 (47.3%) | 699 (52.4%) | 3685 (49.9%) | 669 (49.3%) | 1989 (48.7%) | 6454 (49.5%) | 1776 (48.6%) |
| Missing | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.0%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mother ethnicity ( | |||||||
| Ethnic majority/Born in country | 3739 (93.9%) | 1224 (91.8%) | 3967 (53.7%) | 1232 (90.9%) | 2650 (64.9%) | 10 647 (81.6%) | 2050 (56.1%) |
| Ethnic Minority/Born outside country | 207 (5.2%) | 109 (8.2%) | 3168 (42.9%) | 123 (9.1%) | 1426 (34.9%) | 1910 (14.7%) | 1607 (43.9%) |
| Missing | 38 (1.0%) | 1 (0.1%) | 258 (3.5%) | 1 (0.1%) | 9 (0.2%) | 489 (3.7%) | 0 |
| Maternal Age at Child Birthd (M, SD) | 29.6 yr (4.64) | 29.0 yr (5.1) | 30.59 yr (5.10) | N/A | 31.2 yr (5.2) | 28.99 yr (5.99) | 29.68 yr (3.12) |
aFollow-up age varied by cohort: age 8–9 yrs in ABIS, LSAC; age 8–10 yrs in USNLSY; age 9–10 yrs in GenR; age 10–11 yrs in QLSCD, NLSCY, MCS.
bMaternal education harmonized across cohorts into 3 categories based on International Standard Classification of Education: high (ISCED V-VII), middle (ISCED III-IV), low (ISCED I-II).
cHousehold income grouped into high (5th quintile, richest), middle (2nd to 4th quintile), low (1st quintile, poorest).
dMaternal age at child birth was not available as a continuous variable for NLSCY; missing data reported for ABIS (n = 37, 0.9%), GenR (n = 1, 0.0%), LSAC (n = 3, 0.0%), USNLSY (n = 3, 0.0%).
(Unweighted estimates).
Risk ratios for overweight/obese and obese at follow-up by household income and maternal education at baseline using adjusted multivariate regression.
| ABIS Sweden | QLSCD Quebec | GenR Netherlands | NLSCY Canada | LSAC-B Australia | MCS UK | USNLSY USA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk Ratio, (95% Confidence Interval) | |||||||
| Overweight/Obesea | |||||||
| Maternal Educationb | |||||||
| High (Reference) | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Middle | 1.20 (1.01, 1.43) | 1.33 (1.02, 1.75) | 1.83 (1.54, 2.16) | 1.39 (1.03, 1.89) | 1.54 (1.34, 1.78) | 1.44 (1.31, 1.57) | 1.37 (1.18, 1.59) |
| Low | 1.02 (0.64, 1.60) | 1.30 (0.94, 1.79) | 2.51 (2.09, 3.01) | 1.78 (1.22, 2.59) | 1.61 (1.32, 1.97) | 1.51 (1.38, 1.68) | 1.57 (1.30, 1.90) |
| Household Incomec | |||||||
| High (Reference) | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Middle | 0.97 (0.79, 1.20) | 1.22 (0.89, 1.68) | 1.99 (1.58, 2.52) | 1.45 (1.01, 2.46) | 1.54 (1.28, 1.85) | 1.82 (1.63, 2.04) | 1.29 (1.06, 1.56) |
| Low | 1.16 (0.87, 1.55) | 1.35 (0.87, 2.10) | 2.83 (2.20, 3.64) | 1.88 (1.38, 2.57) | 1.88 (1.53, 2.32) | 2.04 (1.79, 2.32) | 1.39 (1.11, 1.74) |
| Obesea | |||||||
| Maternal Educationb | |||||||
| High (Reference) | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Middle | 2.43 (1.39, 4.25) | 2.67 (1.34, 5.33) | 3.34 (1.97, 5.66) | 1.36 (0.69, 2.69) | 2.13 (1.54, 2.95) | 1.85 (1.54, 2.23) | 1.82 (1.37, 2.42) |
| Low | 3.47 (1.27, 9.45) | 3.88 (1.92, 7.84) | 7.08 (4.17, 12.00) | 1.56 (0.66, 3.72) | 3.07 (2.08, 4.53) | 2.58 (2.12, 3.13) | 1.85 (1.27, 2.71) |
| Household Incomec | |||||||
| High (Reference) | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Middle | 0.79 (0.45, 1.37) | 1.55 (0.75, 3.22) | 6.18 (2.27, 16.86) | 2.07 (0.75, 5.67) | 2.15 (1.49, 3.11) | 2.46 (1.93, 3.14) | 1.65 (1.12, 2.45) |
| Low | 1.04 (0.48, 2.28) | 2.95 (1.15, 7.57) | 10.82 (3.91, 29.95) | 3.25 (1.00, 10.60) | 2.46 (1.55, 3.91) | 3.47 (2.66, 4.53) | 1.67 (1.07, 2.62) |
aAdjusted for child sex, mother ethnicity, and maternal age at child birth. Maternal education and household income exposures at baseline. Overweight/Obese and Obese outcomes at follow-up; age varied by cohort: age 8–9 yrs in ABIS, LSAC; age 8–10 yrs in USNLSY; age 9–10 yrs in GenR; age 10–11 yrs in QLSCD, NLSCY, MCS.
bMaternal education harmonized across cohorts into three categories based on International Standard Classification of Education: high (ISCED V-VII), middle (ISCED III-IV), low (ISCED I-II).
cHousehold income grouped into high (5th quintile, richest), middle (2nd to 4th quintile), low (1st quintile, poorest). Values for 95% confidence intervals vary slightly versus those in the pooled forest plots due to rounding.
(Weighted estimates).
Fig. 1Forest plots of Overweight and Obesity by household income and maternal education.
Upper left panel shows relative risks of Overweight for each individual cohort and pooled estimates in middle and low educational groups compared to high education. Lower left panel: relative risks of Obesity by education. Upper right panel: relative risks of Overweight by income. Lower right panel: relative risks of Obesity by income.
Fig. 2Slope index of inequalities (SIIs) plots of Overweight and Obesity by household income and maternal education.
A Education and Obesity, B Income and Obesity, C Education and Overweight, D Income and Overweight.