Birth weight and cardiometabolic risk factors: a discordant twin study in the UK Biobank.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Pub Date : 2023-04-01 Epub Date: 2022-10-04 DOI:10.1017/S2040174422000538
Geng Wang, Tom A Bond, Nicole M Warrington, David M Evans
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Abstract

One of the longstanding debates in life-course epidemiology is whether an adverse intrauterine environment, often proxied by birth weight, causally increases the future risk of cardiometabolic disease. The use of a discordant twin study design, which controls for the influence of shared genetic and environmental confounding factors, may be useful to investigate whether this relationship is causal. We conducted a discordant twin study of 120 monozygotic (MZ) and 148 dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs from the UK Biobank to explore the potential causal relationships between birth weight and a broad spectrum of later-life cardiometabolic risk factors. We used a linear mixed model to investigate the association between birth weight and later-life cardiometabolic risk factors for twins, allowing for both within-pair differences and between-pair differences in birth weight. Of primary interest is the within-pair association between differences in birth weight and cardiometabolic risk factors, which could reflect an intrauterine effect on later-life risk factors. We found no strong evidence of association in MZ twins between the within-pair differences in birth weight and most cardiometabolic risk factors in later life, except for nominal associations with C-reactive protein and insulin-like growth factor 1. However, these associations were not replicated in DZ twin pairs. Our study provided no strong evidence for intrauterine effects on later-life cardiometabolic risk factors, which is consistent with previous large-scale studies of singletons testing the potential causal relationship. It does not support the hypothesis that adverse intrauterine environments increase the risk of cardiometabolic disease in later life.

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出生体重与心脏代谢风险因素:英国生物库中的不和谐双胞胎研究。
生命历程流行病学中一个长期争论的问题是,不利的宫内环境(通常用出生体重表示)是否会因果性地增加未来罹患心脏代谢疾病的风险。采用不和谐双生子研究设计可控制共同遗传和环境混杂因素的影响,有助于研究这种关系是否是因果关系。我们对英国生物库中的 120 对单卵(MZ)双生子和 148 对双卵(DZ)双生子进行了一项不和谐双生子研究,以探讨出生体重与一系列日后生活中的心脏代谢风险因素之间的潜在因果关系。我们使用线性混合模型来研究双胞胎出生体重与日后心脏代谢风险因素之间的关系,同时考虑到出生体重在配对内和配对间的差异。最令人感兴趣的是出生体重差异与心脏代谢风险因素之间的配对内关联,这可能反映了宫内对日后生活风险因素的影响。我们发现,在 MZ 双胞胎中,除了与 C 反应蛋白和胰岛素样生长因子 1 存在名义上的关联外,出生体重的配对内差异与大多数日后生活中的心脏代谢风险因素之间没有强有力的关联证据。然而,这些关联在 DZ 双胞胎对中没有得到复制。我们的研究没有提供强有力的证据证明宫内效应对日后生活中的心脏代谢风险因素有影响,这与之前对单胎进行的大规模研究测试潜在的因果关系是一致的。它并不支持不利的宫内环境会增加日后罹患心脏代谢疾病风险的假设。
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来源期刊
Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease
Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
145
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: JDOHaD publishes leading research in the field of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD). The Journal focuses on the environment during early pre-natal and post-natal animal and human development, interactions between environmental and genetic factors, including environmental toxicants, and their influence on health and disease risk throughout the lifespan. JDOHaD publishes work on developmental programming, fetal and neonatal biology and physiology, early life nutrition, especially during the first 1,000 days of life, human ecology and evolution and Gene-Environment Interactions. JDOHaD also accepts manuscripts that address the social determinants or education of health and disease risk as they relate to the early life period, as well as the economic and health care costs of a poor start to life. Accordingly, JDOHaD is multi-disciplinary, with contributions from basic scientists working in the fields of physiology, biochemistry and nutrition, endocrinology and metabolism, developmental biology, molecular biology/ epigenetics, human biology/ anthropology, and evolutionary developmental biology. Moreover clinicians, nutritionists, epidemiologists, social scientists, economists, public health specialists and policy makers are very welcome to submit manuscripts. The journal includes original research articles, short communications and reviews, and has regular themed issues, with guest editors; it is also a platform for conference/workshop reports, and for opinion, comment and interaction.
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