4.5 Article

Size at birth, infant growth, and age at pubertal development in boys and girls

Journal

CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages 873-883

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/CLEP.S217388

Keywords

puberty; pubertal development; tanner stages; birth weight

Funding

  1. Danish Council for Independent Research [DFF 4183-00152, 616600023, DFF - 4183-00594]
  2. Danish National Research Foundation
  3. Egmont Foundation
  4. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation
  5. Health Foundation
  6. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  7. Lundbeck Foundation
  8. Danish Medical Research Council [SSVF 0646, 271-08-0839/06-066023, O602-01042B, 0602-02738B]
  9. Lundbeck Foundation [195/04, R100-A9193]
  10. Innovation Fund Denmark [0603-00294B (09-067124)]
  11. Nordea Foundation [02-2013-2014]
  12. Aarhus Ideas [AU R9-A959-13-S804]
  13. University of Copenhagen Strategic Grant (IFSV 2012)
  14. Pharmacy Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Purpose: This study investigated whether size at birth and infant growth were associated with age of indicators of pubertal development in boys and girls. We hypothesized that restricted fetal growth and accelerated infant growth lead to earlier pubertal age. Patients and methods: In total, 15,822 boys and girls answered questionnaires half-yearly with information on pubertal development: age at menarche, first ejaculation, voice break, Tanner stages, axillary hair, and acne. Birth weight and gestational age were used to calculate birth weight Z-scores. Changes in infant weight Z-score from 0 to 5, 5 to 12, and 0 to 12 months were estimated. We estimated the mean monthly difference in timing of puberty between children born small-for-gestational age (SGA) and large-for-gestational age (LGA) with children born appropriate-for-gestational age (AGA) as reference. We further investigated whether increasing infant weight Z-scores were associated with age at attaining indicators of pubertal development. Results: Girls born SGA reached all pubertal markers at an earlier mean age than girls born AGA, as indicated by mean age differences below zero (eg, age at menarche: -2.3 months, 95% CI: -3.4, -1.2), except for breast development. Girls born LGA reached pubertal markers later than girls born AGA (eg, age at menarche: 1.7 months, 95% CI 0.5, 2.9). Boys born SGA and LGA achieved puberty earlier than boys born AGA, though with CIs crossing zero (eg, age at voice break for SGA: -0.7 months, 95% CI -2.1, 0.7 and for LGA: -0.7 months, 95% CI -2.1, 0.8). A 1-unit increase in weight Z-score from 0 to 12 months was associated with a mean age difference of -1.7 to -0.3 months for pubertal development in both sexes. Conclusion: Small size at birth and rapid infant growth were associated with early pubertal age, most consistent and pronounced in girls.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available