Association of Maternal BMI and Rapid Infant Weight Gain With Childhood Body Size and Composition

Author:

Gilley Stephanie P.1,Harrall Kylie K.2,Friedman Chloe2,Glueck Deborah H.12,Cohen Catherine C.12,Perng Wei23,Sauder Katherine A.12,Krebs Nancy F.1,Shankar Kartik12,Dabelea Dana123

Affiliation:

1. aDepartment of Pediatrics, Section of Nutrition, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado

2. bLifecourse Epidemiology of Adiposity and Diabetes Center, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, and Aurora, Colorado

3. cDepartment of Epidemiology, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, Colorado

Abstract

OBJECTIVES Maternal prepregnancy BMI (ppBMI) and an infant’s rapid weight gain (RWG) are each associated with increased risk for childhood obesity. We hypothesized that ppBMI and RWG interact to further raise childhood obesity risk. METHODS Mother-infant dyads (n = 414) from the Healthy Start Study, an observational prebirth cohort, were included. RWG was defined as a weight-for-age z score increase of ≥0.67 from birth to 3 to 7 months. Body composition was measured by air displacement plethysmography at age 4 to 7 years. General linear regression models were fit to characterize associations between ppBMI, RWG, and their interaction with the outcomes of childhood BMI-for-age z score and percent fat mass (%FM). RESULTS A total of 18.6% (n = 77) of offspring experienced RWG. Maternal ppBMI and RWG were both positively associated with offspring BMI z score and %FM. RWG amplified the association between ppBMI and BMI z score, especially among females. Females exposed to maternal obesity and RWG had an average BMI at the 94th percentile (1.50 increase in childhood BMI z score) compared with those exposed to normal ppBMI and no RWG (average childhood BMI at the 51st percentile). RWG had a weaker effect on the association between ppBMI and %FM. Adjustment for breastfeeding status or childhood daily caloric intake did not significantly alter findings. CONCLUSIONS Rapid infant weight gain interacts with maternal ppBMI to jointly exacerbate risk of childhood obesity. Pediatric providers should monitor infants for RWG, especially in the context of maternal obesity, to reduce future risk of obesity.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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