Percent Body Fat and Weight Status of Youth Participating in Pediatric Weight Management Programs in the Pediatric Obesity Weight Evaluation Registry.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS Childhood Obesity Pub Date : 2024-08-26 DOI:10.1089/chi.2023.0201
Maheen Quadri, Adolfo J Ariza, Jared M Tucker, Jennifer W Bea, Eileen C King, Shelley Kirk, Brooke R Sweeney, Melissa Santos, Lucie Silver, Karyn J Roberts, Helen J Binns
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Abstract

Factors associated with change in percent body fat (%BF) of children in pediatric weight management (PWM) care may differ from those associated with change in weight status. Objective: To describe %BF and weight status at initial visits to 14 PWM sites, identify differences by sex, and evaluate factors associated with change over 6 months. Methods: Initial visits of 2496 males and 2821 females aged 5-18 years were evaluated. %BF was measured using bioelectrical impedance analysis. Results: Sex-specific logistic regressions [806 males (32.3%), 837 females (29.7%)] identified associations with primary outcomes: lower %BF and metabolically impactful ≥5-point drop in percent of the 95th BMI percentile (%BMIp95) over 6 months. At the initial visit, males had lower %BF and higher %BMIp95 than females. Over 6 months, males had significantly (p < 0.001) greater median drop in %BF (-1.4% vs. -0.4%) and %BMIp95 (-3.0% vs. -1.9%) and a higher frequency of decreased %BF (68.9% vs. 57.8%), but similar percentage with ≥5-point %BMIp95 drop (36.5% vs. 32.4%; p = 0.080). For males, factors significantly associated with decreased %BF (older age, ≥6 visits, lack of developmental or depression/anxiety concerns) were not related to having a ≥5-point %BMIp95 drop. For females, lack of depression/anxiety concern was significantly associated with decreased %BF but was not associated with ≥5-point %BMIp95 drop. Conclusions: There are differences by sex in initial visit %BF and %BMIp95 and in characteristics associated with changes in these measures. PWM interventions should consider evaluating body composition and sex-stratifying outcomes.

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儿科肥胖症体重评估登记中参加儿科体重管理计划的青少年的体脂百分比和体重状况。
儿科体重管理(PWM)护理中儿童体脂率(%BF)变化的相关因素可能不同于体重状态变化的相关因素。目的:描述 14 个体重管理中心初诊时的体脂百分比和体重状况,确定性别差异,并评估与 6 个月内变化相关的因素。方法: 对 2496 名男性和 2496 名女性进行初次访问:对 2496 名男性和 2821 名女性(5-18 岁)的初次就诊情况进行评估。采用生物电阻抗分析法测量了%BF。结果性别特异性逻辑回归[806 名男性(32.3%),837 名女性(29.7%)]确定了与主要结果的关联:较低的 BF 百分比和 6 个月内 BMI 第 95 百分位数百分比(%BMIp95)下降≥5 点的代谢影响。与女性相比,男性在初次就诊时的肺活量百分比较低,而体重指数 p95 百分比较高。在 6 个月内,男性的 BF%(-1.4% vs. -0.4%)和 BMIp95%(-3.0% vs. -1.9% )的中位数下降幅度明显更大(p < 0.001),BF%下降的频率更高(68.9% vs. 57.8%),但 BMIp95%下降≥5%的比例相似(36.5% vs. 32.4%; p = 0.080)。就男性而言,与 BF 百分比下降明显相关的因素(年龄较大、就诊次数≥6 次、缺乏发育或抑郁/焦虑问题)与 BMIp95 百分比下降≥5 点无关。就女性而言,缺乏抑郁/焦虑问题与%BF下降显著相关,但与%BMIp95下降≥5点无关。结论:初次就诊时,BF%和BMIp95%以及与这些指标变化相关的特征存在性别差异。PWM干预措施应考虑评估身体成分和性别分层结果。
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来源期刊
Childhood Obesity
Childhood Obesity PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
95
期刊介绍: Childhood Obesity is the only peer-reviewed journal that delivers actionable, real-world obesity prevention and weight management strategies for children and adolescents. Health disparities and cultural sensitivities are addressed, and plans and protocols are recommended to effect change at the family, school, and community level. The Journal also reports on the problem of access to effective healthcare and delivers evidence-based solutions to overcome these barriers.
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