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The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease: Adolescence as a Critical Lifecourse Period to Break the Transgenerational Cycle of NCDs-A Narrative Review

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19106024

Keywords

developmental origins of health and disease; DOHaD; noncommunicable diseases; developmental programming; adolescents; adolescence; lifecourse

Funding

  1. New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade grant [PF-11-613]
  2. Pacific Research project award from the Health Research Council of New Zealand [3719750, 20/284]
  3. Health Research Council of New Zealand Pacific PhD Research Scholarship [3724688, 22/121/A]

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Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, are a significant global health burden. Early life exposures can increase the risk of developing NCDs across the lifecourse, passing on these risk factors to future generations. Adolescence is a critical developmental window, where lifestyle behaviors become ingrained. Focusing on adolescent behaviors, health literacy, and emotional development may be the best opportunity to break the cycle of NCDs.
Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), including type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, represent a significant and growing global health burden. To date, a primary focus has been on treatment approaches to NCDs once manifested rather than strategies aimed at prevention. In this context, there is clear evidence that a range of adverse early life exposures can predispose individuals towards a greater risk of developing NCDs across the lifecourse. These risk factors can be passed to future generations, thus perpetuating a cycle of disease. This concept, preferentially termed developmental programming, forms the basis of the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) framework. To date, DOHaD has focused on preconception, pregnancy, lactation and, more recently, paternal health at the time of conception. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that investment in the window of adolescence is perhaps the most critical developmental window. Adolescence is a period where lifestyle behaviours become entrained. Therefore, a focus on adolescent behaviours, health literacy and emotional development may afford the best opportunity to break the cycle of NCDs. As the next generation of parents, adolescents should therefore be considered a priority group in advancing appropriate and informed actions aimed at reducing NCD risk factors across the lifecourse. This advancement requires a more comprehensive community understanding and uptake of DOHaD knowledge and concepts. NCD prevention strategies have typically entailed siloed (and often disease-specific) approaches with limited efficacy in curbing NCD prevalence and breaking the transgenerational transmission of disease traits. Recent findings across various disciplines have highlighted that a lifecourse systems approach is required to establish a comprehensive and sustainable framework for NCD intervention. A whole community approach with a particular focus on adolescents as potential agents of change is necessary to break the disease cycle.

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