Atherosclerosis and Lipoproteins |
From the School of Medicine (P.M.L.S., A.C., A.J.M.), Health Policy and Practice, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK; Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology Unit (R.S., M.F., T.D.S., A.J.M.), Kings College, London, UK.
Correspondence to Paula Skidmore, School of Medicine, Health Policy and Practice, University of East Anglia, Norwich., NR4 7JT. E-mail p.skidmore{at}uea.ac.uk
Objective To investigate the association between birth weight and lipid levels in a cohort of UK female twins.
Methods and Results Birth weights and fasting blood lipid levels were available for 2900 women aged 18 to 80 years. Individual level regressions indicated that a 1-kg increase in birth weight was associated with a 0.08-mmol/L decrease in total cholesterol (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.12, 0.04) and a 0.06-mmol/L decrease in low-density lipoprotein (0.10, 0.03). Using a regression model that includes both mean twin pair birth weight and individual twins difference from the pair mean, we found that these significant relationships were between twin pairs only and not within pairs. We found no significant relationships for high-density lipoprotein. When monozygotic and dizygotic twins were analyzed separately we found similar effect sizes. Restricting the analysis to postmenopausal women we found stronger relationships between birth weight and lipid levels, which was attenuated after adjustment for body mass index (BMI).
Conclusions These novel results suggest that significant relationships between birth weight and lipids are mediated through shared influences on the maternal environment and do not support the hypothesis that fetal malnutrition is an important determinant of adult lipid levels. Adjustment for BMI also indicates that postnatal growth may be more important than prenatal growth.
In a cohort of 2900 female twins, we found that birth weight was inversely significantly related to total and LDL cholesterol, between twin pairs only and not within pairs. These findings indicate that the relationships between birth weight and lipids are mediated through shared influences on the maternal environment.
Key Words: birth weight environment epidemiology lipids twins
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P. M. Skidmore, A. Cassidy, R. Swaminathan, J B. Richards, M. Mangino, T. D Spector, and A. J MacGregor An obesogenic postnatal environment is more important than the fetal environment for the development of adult adiposity: a study of female twins Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, August 1, 2009; 90(2): 401 - 406. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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