Joint association and interaction of birth weight and lifestyle with hypertension: A cohort study in UK Biobank

Author:

Zhang Ziyi12,Liu Xiaowen12,Huang Ninghao1,Jin Ming12,Zhuang Zhenhuang1,Yang Zeping12,Liu Xiaojing12,Huang Tao134,Li Nan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics School of Public Health, Peking University Beijing China

2. Institute of Reproductive and Child Health Peking University/ Key Laboratory of Reproductive Health, National Health Commission of the People's Republic of China Beijing China

3. Key Laboratory of Molecular Cardiovascular Sciences (Peking University), Ministry of Education Beijing China

4. Center for Intelligent Public Health, Institute for Artificial Intelligence, Peking University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractLow birth weight and unhealthy lifestyle are both associated with an increased risk of hypertension. The authors aimed to assess the joint association and interaction of birth weight and lifestyle with incident hypertension. The authors included 205 522 participants free of hypertension at baseline from UK Biobank. A healthy lifestyle score was constructed using information on body mass index, physical activity, diet, smoking status and alcohol intake. Cox proportional hazard models were used to investigate the impact of birth weight, healthy lifestyle score and their joint effect on hypertension. The authors documented 13 548 (6.59%) incident hypertension cases during a median of 8.6 years of follow‐up. The multivariate adjusted hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals were 1.12 (1.09, 1.15) per kg lower birth weight and 0.76 (0.75, 0.77) per score increment in healthy lifestyle score. Healthy lifestyle reduced the risk of hypertension in any category of different birth weight groups. The preventive effect of healthy lifestyle on hypertension was the most pronounced at lower birth weight with <2500 g and 2500–2999 g, respectively. Addictive interaction between birth weight and healthy lifestyle score was observed with the relative excess risk due to interaction of 0.04 (0.03, 0.05). Our findings emphasized the importance of healthy lifestyle for hypertension prevention, especially among the high‐risk population with lower birth weight.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality

Peking University Health Science Center

Publisher

Wiley

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