4.7 Article

Caesarean section and childhood obesity at age 3 years derived from the Japan Environment and Children's Study

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-33653-7

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Caesarean section (CS) birth is a risk factor for childhood obesity. However, it is unclear whether this risk also applies in the Japanese population. A large-scale birth cohort study in Japan revealed that CS birth modestly increases the risk of obesity at 3 years of age in Japanese children.
Caesarean section (CS) birth is widely reported to be a risk factor for childhood obesity. Although susceptibility to childhood obesity is influenced by race and ethnicity, it is unclear whether this risk of childhood obesity with CS birth also applies in the Japanese population. We investigated the impact of CS birth on obesity at 3 years of age in Japanese children. We obtained data from 60,769 mother-toddler pairs in the Japan Environment and Children's Study, a large-scale birth cohort study. Obesity was determined by body mass index measured at 3 years of age. Analysis revealed that 11,241 toddlers (18.5%) had a CS birth and that 4912 toddlers (8.1%) were obese. The adjusted risk ratio for obesity at 3 years of age when born by CS compared with vaginal delivery, estimated using inverse probability of treatment weighting, was 1.16 (95% confidence interval 1.08-1.25). These results suggest that CS birth modestly increases the risk of obesity at 3 years of age in Japanese children.

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