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Review
. 2015;25(1):2-7.
doi: 10.2188/jea.JE20140130. Epub 2014 Oct 4.

Longitudinal analyses of childhood growth: evidence from Project Koshu

Affiliations
Review

Longitudinal analyses of childhood growth: evidence from Project Koshu

Kohta Suzuki. J Epidemiol. 2015.

Abstract

Recently, it has been suggested that fetal and infant environments are associated with childhood and adulthood health status, specifically regarding presence of obesity and chronic diseases. This concept is known as the "Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesis." Thus, it is necessary to collect information about the fetal and infancy periods in order to examine the association between fetal and infancy exposures and later growth. Based on the DOHaD hypothesis, childhood growth trajectories, which were described by multilevel analysis, might be important in examining the effects of early-life environment on later-life health. The author and colleagues examined the association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and fetal/childhood growth, specifically risk of childhood obesity, by using the dataset from an ongoing prospective cohort study called "Project Koshu," which enrolled pregnant women and their children from a rural area of Japan. Children born to smoking mothers were likely to have lower birth weights and, thereafter, to show an increase in body mass index compared to children of non-smoking mothers. Differences in pubertal growth patterns by gender and childhood weight status were then examined. Growth rate and height gain trajectories were similar between genders, although pubertal growth spurts were observed earlier in girls than in boys. The overweight/obese children grew faster than did the non-overweight children in the early pubertal stages, and the non-overweight children caught up and showed greater height gains at older ages. Because Project Koshu is ongoing, further studies examining new research questions will be conducted with larger sample sizes.

近年、胎児期あるいは幼児期の環境がその後の発育、特に、肥満や生活習慣病などの健康状態に影響すると示唆されており、この概念は「Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) 説」として知られている。胎児期や幼児期における曝露因子とその後の発育を検討するためには、胎児期からの情報を収集することが必須である。一方で、「ライフコース疫学」という言葉もよく用いられるようになってきた。DOHaD説に基づいて、マルチレベル解析を用いて子どもの発育を軌跡として記述することは、胎児期や出生後早期の影響を検討するために重要である。著者らは妊娠中の喫煙と、胎児期また小児期の発育、特に肥満との関係を、現在も継続して実施されている、妊娠期からの前向きコホート研究「甲州プロジェクト」のデータを用いて検討した。その結果、妊娠中に喫煙している母親から生まれた児は出生体重が小さくなり、さらにその後Body Mass Index(BMI)が増加しやすい傾向を示した。また、思春期の発育パターンが、男女で、また体格によって異なることも検討した。身長の伸びなどの発育パターンは男女で同様であったが、女児で男児よりも思春期の身長の伸びのピークが早いことが観察された。また、過体重あるいは肥満の児は、非肥満の児に比べ発育のピークが早いこと、非肥満の児は中学生の時期により身長が伸びることが示された。甲州プロジェクトは継続しており、今後、胎児期から小児期にかけての新しい研究テーマについても、対象者数を現在より増やして検討することが可能である。

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.. Brief study design of Project Koshu
Figure 2.
Figure 2.. Children’s body mass index (BMI) trajectories by maternal smoking status during pregnancy, calculated using individual growth analysis (original data: Suzuki et al, 2011)

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