Period-specific growth, overweight and modification by breastfeeding in the GINI and LISA birth cohorts up to age 6 years

Peter Rzehak, Stefanie Sausenthaler, Sibylle Koletzko, Carl Peter Bauer, Beate Schaaf, Andrea Von Berg, Dietrich Berdel, Michael Borte, Olf Herbarth, Ursula Krämer, Nora Fenske, H. Erich Wichmann, Joachim Heinrich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

52 Scopus citations

Abstract

Children's weight/growth development is age-specific and may be influenced by breastfeeding. We therefore assessed velocities of weight, length, body-mass-index and overweight/obesity development from birth up to age 6 years overall and in relation to breastfeeding. The method of this study is based on pooled data of the birth-cohorts GINI-plus and LISA-plus and follows 7,643 healthy full-term neonates in four study-centers in Germany. Up to nine anthropometric measurements are available. Overweight/obesity is percentile-defined according to WHO-Child-Growth-Standards. Fully-breastfed is defined as breastfed for at least 4 months. Piecewise-linear-random-coefficient- models were applied to assess growth trajectories and velocities between 0-3, 3-6, 6-12, 12-24 and beyond 24th months. Velocities for weight-, length- and BMI-development are highest in the first 3 months after birth and diminish, with differing pace, in the periods that follow. For overweight and obesity, peak-velocities are estimated in periods 6-12 and 3-6 months. The difference in the velocity of weight gain for breastfed vs. other children is -18 g/month in the first 3 month, -93 g/month between month 3 and 6, -14 g/month between month 6 and 12 and -3 g/month beyond the 24th month. Velocities in length are not different between breastfed and non-breastfed children. Over time, a slightly lower risk (difference < 2%) of being overweight was estimated for breastfed children, after adjustment for study-center, socio-economic-status and maternal smoking in pregnancy. Infants fully-breastfed gain less weight, but grow equally in length in the first 12 months of life versus mixed or formula-fed children. The protective effect of breastfeeding on becoming overweight is related to its weight-velocity-modifying-effect in early infancy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)449-467
Number of pages19
JournalEuropean Journal of Epidemiology
Volume24
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2009

Keywords

  • Body mass index
  • Breastfeeding
  • GINI and LISA birth cohort studies
  • Height
  • Kompetenznetz adipositas
  • Length
  • Obesity
  • Overweight
  • Period specific growth rates
  • Weight

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