4.7 Article

Prenatal Factors for Childhood Blood Pressure Mediated by Intrauterine and/or Childhood Growth?

Journal

PEDIATRICS
Volume 127, Issue 3, Pages E713-E721

Publisher

AMER ACAD PEDIATRICS
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2010-2000

Keywords

blood pressure; pregnancy; fetal development; infant; small for gestational age; child development; obesity

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  2. National Institutes of Health Transdisciplinary Tobacco Use Research Center [P50 CA084719]
  3. National Cancer Institute
  4. National Institute on Drug Abuse
  5. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
  6. Flight Attendants Medical Research Institute
  7. Maternal and Child Health Bureau, US Department of Health and Human Services [R40MC03600-01-00]

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OBJECTIVE: Some prenatal factors may program an offspring's blood pressure, but existing evidence is inconclusive and mechanisms remain unclear. We examined the mediating roles of intrauterine and childhood growth in the associations between childhood systolic blood pressure (SBP) and 5 potentially modifiable prenatal factors: maternal smoking during pregnancy; prepregnancy BMI; pregnancy weight gain; chronic hypertension; and preeclampsia-eclampsia. METHODS: The sample contained 30 461 mother-child pairs in the Collaborative Perinatal Project. Prenatal data were extracted from obstetric forms, and children's SBP was measured at 7 years of age. Potential mediation by intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and childhood growth was examined by the causal step method. RESULTS: Heavy maternal smoking during pregnancy was significantly associated with higher offspring SBP (adjusted mean difference versus nonsmoking: 0.73 mm Hg [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.32-1.14]), which attenuated to null (0.13 [95% CI: -0.27-0.54]) after adjustment for changes in BMI from birth to 7 years of age. Prepregnancy overweight-obesity was significantly associated with higher offspring SBP (versus normal weight: 0.89 mm Hg [95% CI: 0.52-1.26]), which also attenuated to null (-0.04 mm Hg [95% CI: -0.40-0.31]) after adjustment for childhood BMI trajectory. Adjustment for BMI trajectory augmented the association between maternal pregnancy weight gain and offspring SBP. Adjustment for childhood weight trajectory similarly changed these associations. However, all these associations were independent of IUGR. CONCLUSIONS: Childhood BMI and weight trajectory, but not IUGR, may largely mediate the associations of maternal smoking during pregnancy and prepregnancy BMI with an offspring's SBP. Pediatrics 2011; 127:e713-e721

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