与英国白人相比,南亚和非洲黑人/加勒比人的儿童总脂肪升高与不良的早期成长和较低的社会经济地位有关。

IF 10.2 1区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Diabetologia Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-06-27 DOI:10.1007/s00125-025-06473-9
Kishan Patel, Sophie V Eastwood, Jonathan C Wells, Nish Chaturvedi, Charis Bridger Staatz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的/假设:少数民族人群中2型糖尿病过多仍无法解释,尽管较大的脂肪质量是主要原因。我们假设南亚和非洲/加勒比黑人群体婴儿期的身高和体重比白人群体更不利。这些因素,加上贫穷的社会经济地位,决定了7岁时更多的脂肪量。方法:我们报告了来自英国千禧年队列研究的二次分析,包括2000年至2002年间出生的12280名白人、358名印度人、650名巴基斯坦人、268名孟加拉国人、163名加勒比黑人和277名非洲黑人。报告了出生体重,并测量了3岁、5岁、7岁、11岁、14岁和17岁时的身高和体重。生物阻抗测量了7岁、11岁、14岁和17岁时与身高挂钩的脂肪量。使用White组作为比较,计算人体测量的标准化差异。我们探讨了早期生长对7岁时脂肪质量指数种族差异的影响。混杂因素包括母亲的人体测量、吸烟、婴儿母乳喂养、教育、父母收入和地区层面的社会经济剥夺。结果:与白人儿童相比,所有少数民族亚群的出生体重均较低,婴儿身高和体重增长加快。到3岁时,所有少数民族儿童的平均身高都高于白人儿童。这种身高优势逐渐消失,首先是孟加拉国儿童。在17岁的男孩/女孩中,印度人比白人儿童矮1.77/2.48厘米,巴基斯坦人矮2.24/3.44厘米,孟加拉国人矮4.83/5.95厘米,加勒比黑人比白人儿童矮1.64/0.49厘米。非洲黑人儿童的身高是相等的。到17岁时,所有南亚儿童都比白人儿童更轻,非洲黑人/加勒比儿童比白人儿童更重。不同种族儿童的人体测量梯度反映了母亲的情况。少数民族女孩比白人女孩更有可能在11岁时来月经(12-27%比9%)。在7岁时,印度儿童的标准化脂肪质量指数(kg/m2)比白人儿童高0.17/0.01个标准差,巴基斯坦儿童高0.21/0.04,孟加拉国儿童高0.18/0.16,加勒比黑人儿童高0.48/0.35,非洲黑人儿童高0.37/0.75。这些差异一直持续到17岁。体重增加到3岁,以及在非洲黑人/加勒比人中,不利的个人和社区社会经济地位导致了脂肪量的种族差异。结论/解释:英国少数民族儿童的童年发育比白人儿童差,身高更矮,脂肪量更大,女性青春期更早。母亲和后代在身高和体重上的亚群梯度反映了代际遗传。持续不利的社会经济环境使早期身体脂肪积累的种族逆境永久化。数据可用性:本分析中使用的所有MCS数据均可从英国数据服务获得最终用户许可(https://ukdataservice.ac.uk/find-data/)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Diabetogenic elevated childhood total fat in South Asian and Black African/Caribbean people relates to adverse early life growth and low socioeconomic position compared with White people in the UK.

Diabetogenic elevated childhood total fat in South Asian and Black African/Caribbean people relates to adverse early life growth and low socioeconomic position compared with White people in the UK.

Diabetogenic elevated childhood total fat in South Asian and Black African/Caribbean people relates to adverse early life growth and low socioeconomic position compared with White people in the UK.

Diabetogenic elevated childhood total fat in South Asian and Black African/Caribbean people relates to adverse early life growth and low socioeconomic position compared with White people in the UK.

Aims/hypothesis: Excess type 2 diabetes mellitus in minority ethnic groups remains unexplained, although greater fat mass makes a strong contribution. We hypothesised that height and weight through infancy in South Asian and Black African/Caribbean subgroups is more adverse than in White populations. These, allied to poor socioeconomic position, determine greater fat mass at age 7 years.

Methods: We report a secondary analysis from the UK Millennium Cohort Study, including 12,280 births of White ethnicity, and 358 of Indian, 650 of Pakistani, 268 of Bangladeshi, 163 of Black Caribbean and 277 of Black African ethnicity between 2000 and 2002. Birthweight was reported, and heights and weights were measured at ages 3, 5, 7, 11, 14 and 17 years. Bioimpedance captured fat mass, indexed to height, at ages 7, 11, 14 and 17 years. Standardised differences in anthropometry, using the White group as the comparator, were calculated. We explored the effect of early growth on ethnic differences in fat-mass index at age 7 years. Confounders included maternal anthropometry, smoking, infant breastfeeding, education, parental income and area-level socioeconomic deprivation.

Results: All minority ethnic subgroups had lower birthweight and accelerated infant height and weight growth compared with White children. By age 3 years, mean height was greater in all minority ethnic groups than in White children. This height advantage was progressively lost, first in Bangladeshi children. By age 17 years in boys/girls, Indians were 1.77/2.48 cm, Pakistanis 2.24/3.44 cm, Bangladeshis 4.83/5.95 cm and Black Caribbeans 1.64/0.49 cm shorter than White children. Heights were equivalent in Black African children. By age 17 years, all South Asian children were lighter, and Black African/Caribbean children heavier, than White children. The anthropometric gradient by ethnicity in children mirrored that in mothers. Girls from minority ethnic groups were more likely to be menstruating by age 11 years than White girls (range 12-27% vs 9%). At age 7 years, standardised fat-mass index (kg/m2) in boys/girls was 0.17/0.01 SDs greater in Indian, 0.21/0.04 in Pakistani, 0.18/0.16 in Bangladeshi, 0.48/0.35 in Black Caribbean and 0.37/0.75 in Black African children than in White children. These differences persisted to age 17 years. Weight gain to age 3 years, and in Black Africans/Caribbeans, adverse individual and neighbourhood socioeconomic position, contributed to ethnic differences in fat mass.

Conclusions/interpretation: Minority ethnic groups in the UK have poorer childhood growth than White children, achieving shorter height, greater fat mass and earlier female puberty. Mirroring of maternal and offspring ethnic subgroup gradients in height and weight indicates intergenerational transmission. Persistent adverse socioeconomic circumstances perpetuate ethnic adversity in early life accrual of body fat.

Data availability: All MCS data used in this analysis are available from UK Data Service with an end user licence ( https://ukdataservice.ac.uk/find-data/ ).

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来源期刊
Diabetologia
Diabetologia 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
18.10
自引率
2.40%
发文量
193
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Diabetologia, the authoritative journal dedicated to diabetes research, holds high visibility through society membership, libraries, and social media. As the official journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, it is ranked in the top quartile of the 2019 JCR Impact Factors in the Endocrinology & Metabolism category. The journal boasts dedicated and expert editorial teams committed to supporting authors throughout the peer review process.
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