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. 2020 Mar 18;17(3):e1003078. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003078

Table 3. Cause-specific mortality rate ratio (MMR) for the childhood obesity cohort compared to the comparison group.

Cause of death Number of deaths Mortality rate per 10,000 person-years Crude MRR (95% CI); p-value Adjusted MRR (95% CI); p-value
Childhood obesity cohort Comparison group
Injuries and external causes 7 14 1.10 2.44 (0.98–6.04); 0.054 2.38 (0.96–5.94); 0.063
Endogenous causes 15 17 1.68 4.30 (2.15–8.61); <0.001 4.04 (2.00–8.17); <0.001
Suicide and self-harm 16 31 2.46 2.51 (1.38–4.60); 0.003 2.15 (1.17–3.95); 0.014
Excluding individuals with genetic syndromesa and malignant tumorsb in childhood
Injuries and external causes 7 14 1.33 2.49 (1.01–6.17); 0.049 2.43 (0.97–6.06); 0.057
Endogenous causes 11 12 1.46 4.56 (2.01–10.33); <0.001 4.50 (2.00–10.32); <0.001
Suicide and self-harm 15 31 2.92 2.40 (1.30–4.45); 0.005 2.03 (1.09–3.78); 0.026

Crude and adjusted models yielded MRRs for childhood obesity cohort versus comparison group; adjusted model controlled for sex, Nordic origin, and parental SES. Endogenous causes of death included deaths from pathogens, acquired disorders, congenital disorders, etc. Suicide and self-harm included intentional deaths from suicide as well as deaths with unintentional or unclear intention from poisoning, e.g., illicit drugs. Injuries and other external causes included deaths such as traffic accidents and homicide.

aFragile X, Klinefelter, Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl, Down, Noonan, Prader–Willi, Silver–Russell, and Turner.

bIncluding benign brain tumors.