Prenatal Influences on Size, Velocity and Tempo of Infant Growth: Findings from Three Contemporary Cohorts
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2014Metadata
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Pizzi, Costanza
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Prenatal Influences on Size, Velocity and Tempo of Infant Growth: Findings from Three Contemporary Cohorts
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Abstract
Background: Studying prenatal influences of early life growth is relevant to life-course epidemiology as some of its features
have been linked to the onset of later diseases.
Methods: We studied the association between prenatal maternal characteristics (height, age, parity, education, prepregnancy
body mass index (BMI), smoking, gestational diabetes and hypertension) and offspring weight trajectories in
infancy using SuperImposition by Translation And Rotation (SITAR) models, which parameterize growth in terms of three
biologically interpretable parameters: size, velocity and tempo. We used data from three contemporary cohorts based in
Portugal (GXXI, n = 738), Italy (NINFEA, n = 2,925), and Chile (GOCS, n = 959).
Results: Estimates were generally consistent across the cohorts for maternal height, age, parity and pre-pregnancy
overweight/obesity. Some exposures only affected one growth parameter (e.g. maternal height (per cm): 0.4% increase in
size (95% confidence interval (CI):0.3; 0.5)), others were either found to affect size and velocity (e.g. pre-pregnancy
underweight vs normal weight: smaller size (24.9%, 95% CI:26.5; 23.3), greater velocity (5.9%, 95% CI:1.9;10.0)), or to
additionally influence tempo (e.g. pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity vs normal weight: increased size (7.9%, 95%
CI:4.9;10.8), delayed tempo (0.26 months, 95% CI:0.11;0.41), decreased velocity (24.9%, 95% CI: 210.8;0.9)).
Conclusions: By disentangling the growth parameters of size, velocity and tempo, we found that prenatal maternal
characteristics, especially maternal smoking, pre-pregnancy overweight and underweight, parity and gestational
hypertension, are associated with different aspects of infant weight growth. These results may offer insights into the
mechanisms governing infant growth.
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NINFEA cohort was partially funded by Compagnia San-Paolo Foundation, Piedmont Region and Italian Ministry of University and Research. GXXI
cohort was funded by Programa Operacional de Sade - Saude XXI, Quadro Comunitario de Apoio III and by Administracao Regional de Saude Norte. GOCS cohort
was funded by Fondecyt projects 1060785, 1090252 and 1120326. TJC is funded by Medical Research Council grant MR/J004839/1. The funders had no role in
study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/124131
DOI: doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0090291
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PLoS ONE 9(2): e90291.
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