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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Oct 26.
Published in final edited form as: Obes Rev. 2017 Oct 20;19(3):321–332. doi: 10.1111/obr.12632

Table 1. Characteristics of studies examining the association between rapid weight gain during infancy and later adiposity outcomes1.

Author, year Study design n Country RWG period % RWG Age at outcome assessment Adiposity Outcomes Statistical method Covariates (child and maternal factors) RWG associations Quality
Karaolis-Danckert 2006 Prospective cohort 206 Healthy term children Germany Birth to 2y 28.6% 7y Overweight/obesity (IOTF, 16.2%) Also: growth trajectories of BMIz and PBF from 2-7 y, skinfold, MUAC, arm fat area Linear mixed regression model; logistic regression Child: Sex, BMI at birth, gestational age, breastfeeding Maternal: weight status, education Higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR 6.2 95%CI 2.4, 16.5), Also: higher BMIz, PBF, skinfold, MUAC Acceptable
Akaboshi 2008 Retrospective cohort 1353 Healthy term children Japan Birth to 3-4mo 22.7% 3y Overweight/obesity (IOTF, 34.1%) Multivariable logistic regression Child: Birth weight, breastfeeding Higher risk of overweight/obesity (boys: AOR 6.767 95%CI 2.180-21.007; girls: AOR 4.966 95%CI 2.388-10.327) Acceptable
Hui 2008* Prospective cohort 6075 term children Hong Kong Birth to 3mo Not reported 7y Overweight/obesity (IOTF, 15.3%) Multivariable linear and logistic regression Child: Sex, gestational age, birth weight; birth order, infant feeding Maternal: education, smoking Higher risk of overweight/obesity with highest risk among those with rapid growth and high birth weight High
Demerath 2009 Prospective cohort 233 AGA children US Birth to 2y Not reported 46.5 y Overweight/obesity (% not reported) Also: WC, FM, FFM, PBF, VAT, ASAT Multivariable general linear models Child: Sex, gestational age, birth weight z-score, stature, birth year, birth order, breastfeeding, adulthood stature, adulthood education, smoking, physical activity Maternal: age at birth Higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR 5.54 95%CI 1.88, 16.31) Also: higher FM (+7kg), PBF (+5%), logVAT mass (+0.43 kg,), log ASAT mass (+0.47kg,), and % abdominal fat (+5%) Acceptable
Goodell, 2009 Retrospective cohort 203 Children US (low income, inner city minority population) Birth to 4 mo and 1 y 54.2% at 4mo, 39.9% at 1 y 2-3 y Obesity (≥95th percentile, 17.7%) Multivariable logistic regression Child: Sex, birth weight RWG birth to 1 y: higher risk of obesity (AOR: 11.7, 95%CI 4.5-30.0). RWG birth to 4 mo: no significant association (OR 1.94 95%CI 0.89-4.21) Acceptable
Heppe 2013 Prospective cohort 3610 children Netherlands Birth to 2 y 20.1% 4 y Overweight/obesity (IOTF, 7.1% boys, 11.4% girls) Multivariable logistic regression Child: Sex, birth weight Maternal: education, house income, pre-pregnancy BMI, gestational weight gain, smoking, fruit/vegetable intake, fat intake Higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR 6.39 95%CI 4.54-8.99) High
Fujita 2013 Retrospective cohort 1624 Adolescents Japan Birth to 1.5 y 32.0% 13-14 y Overweight/obesity (IOTF, 7.8%) Multivariable logistic regression Child: Sex, birth weight Maternal: BMI Higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR 2.57 95%CI 1.74-4.68). Acceptable
Odegaard 2013 Prospective cohort 422 AGA children US Birth to: 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, 18 and 24 mo Not reported 20-29 y Overweight/obesity (≥85th percentile, 23.9%) Multivariable logistic regression Child: Sex, birth year, birth weight, age at outcome Maternal: gestational age at birth, age and BMI RWG: birth to 24mo, no other periods, was associated with higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR 2.04, 95%CI: 1.11-3.74) Acceptable
Rathnayake 2013 Case control 142 preschool aged children born term Sri Lanka Birth to 2 y Not reported 3-5 y (4.2 y) Overweight/obesity (WHO, 7.4%) Multivariable logistic regression Child: birth weight, mode of delivery, parity, breastfeeding, Maternal: education, age during delivery, working status, presence of GDM, past history of abortion, pre-pregnancy obesity, child rearing pattern, disease history Higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR=6.29, 95%CI 2.04-19.49) Acceptable
Taal 2013 Prospective cohort 3941 Netherlands Birth to 2 y 19.9% 4 y Overweight/obesity (WHO, 48.5% in LGA), Also: BMI Multivariable linear and logistic regression Child: Sex, age, height Maternal: age, height, pre-pregnancy weight, parity, education, smoking during pregnancy Compare to AGA normal growth, AGA rapid growth was associated higher overweight/obesity risk (AOR 3.11 95% CI 2.37-4.08) High
Webster 2013** Prospective cohort 157 children Australia Birth to 12 mo 34.4% 2 y Overweight/obesity (BMI ≥85th percentile, 36.9%) Pearson chi-square test None Higher risk of overweight/obesity (OR=5.22, 95%CI 2.33-11.71) Low
Weng 2013 Prospective cohort 18296 Healthy term children UK Birth to 1 y Not reported 3 y Overweight (IOTF, 36.9%) Multivariable logistic regression Child: Sex, birth weight, breastfeeding Maternal BMI, smoking, Higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR=4.15, 95%CI 3.64-4.73) Acceptable
Goncalves 2014** Prospective cohort 167 term children (67 LBW, 100 HBW) Brazil Birth to 6 mo 41.9% 8 y BMI, WC Multivariable linear regression Child: Sex, birth weight, breastfeeding Maternal: BMI, SES, height Higher risk of overweight (AOR=3.02, 95%CI 1.71-5.38) Also: higher BMI (1.4 kg/m2 95%CI 0.7, 2.2) and WC (4 cm 95%CI 2.1, 5.9) Acceptable
Salgin 2015* Prospective cohort 2352 Singleton children South Africa Birth to 1 y 12.3% 8y and 18 y BMI z, MUAC, skinfold at 8y and BMI z, FM, % FM, FFM at 18y ANOVA to assess differences across slow, normal, rapid weight gain Child: Sex, age, birth order Maternal: smoking during pregnancy, gestational age, formula feeding and SES RWG was associated with greater mid-upper arm circumference and skinfold at 8 y; and higher weight and BMIz at 18 y (p<0.05) Low
Sutharsan 2015 Prospective cohort 1768 term children Australia Birth to 6 mo 22.0% 21 y Overweight/obesity (WHO, 33.6%) Also: WC, and WHR categories Multivariable logistic regression Child: Sex, breastfeeding, parity, fast food intake, TV viewing, physical activity, Maternal: education, age, gestation, pre-pregnancy BMI, smoking and race No significant association with overweight/obesity risk (AOR=1.13 95%CI 0.86-1.49); WC (AOR 1.24 95%CI 0.92-1.67); WHR (AOR 0.97 95%CI 0.71, 1.32) Acceptable
Nanri 2016 Retrospective cohort 1296 Adolescents Japan Birth to 1.5y 40.5% 9-10 y Overweight/obesity (IOTF, 11.8% boys, 9.0% girls) Multivariable logistic regression Child: Age, birth weight No significant association was found between RWG from 0-1.5y and overweight (girl AOR 2.60 95%CI 0.96, 7.04; boy AOR 1.67 95%CI 0.83, 3.33) Acceptable
Zhou 2016 Prospective cohort 581 Children China Birth to 1.5 y 31.2% 7-9 y Overweight/obesity (WHO, 5.7%) Also: BMIz, MUAC, PBF, FMI Multilevel mixed analysis Child: Sex, age, birth weight, gestational age, parity, infant feeding, Maternal: SES, education, occupation;, height and BMI, malnutrition, nutrient supplementation, activity level and medical history Higher risk of overweight/obesity (AOR 2.94 95%CI 1.17-7.43), Also: higher BMIz (AOR 0.69 95%CI 0.49-0.89), MUAC(AOR 1.01, 95%CI 0.71-1.32), PBF(AOR 2.90 95%CI 1.88-3.93), FMI (β=0.58 95%CI 0.37-0.80) High
1

RWG: rapid weight gain, AOR: adjusted odds ratio, CI: confidence interval, BMI: body mass index, MUAC: mid upper arm circumference, IOTF: international obesity task force, WC: waist circumference, FM: fat mass, FFM: fat free mass, PBF: percentage body fat, VAT: visceral adipose tissue, ASAT: abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue, SD: standard deviation, SES: socioeconomic status, CDC: Centre for Diseases Control, LGA: large for gestational age, WHO: world health organisation, WHR: waist-to-hip ratio, ANOVA: analysis of variance, TV: Television, FMI: fat mass index

*

Insufficient information to convert reported estimates to odds ratio for overweight

**

Conversions were made from reported estimates to odds ratio for overweight, Webster et al was not adjusted OR as this was simply estimated from the 2x2 table of number overweight and not overweight by RWG