Interesting

Early childhood weight patterns linked to future obesity risk

Not all children grow the same way. A new study from the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program suggests that body weight changes in early childhood may be associated with later obesity risk.

Funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the study tracked children's body mass index (BMI) from infancy through age 9 and found two distinct growth patterns. Most children followed a typical curve, with BMI decreasing in early childhood before gradually rising again. But a smaller group followed a trajectory marked by a sharp rise in BMI, which put them at higher risk of developing obesity by age 9.

Key takeaways:

  • Researchers found two main BMI growth patterns in children. Most children (89.4%) had a typical pattern where their BMI declined from ages 1 to 6, then rose slowly. A smaller group (10.6%) had an atypical pattern where their BMI stayed the same from ages 1 to 3.5, then increased rapidly from ages 3.5 to 9.
  • By age 9, children in the atypical group were more likely to develop obesity, with an average BMI higher than the 99th percentile.
  • Several early-life factors were associated with the child's risk of developing obesity, including high birthweight, maternal smoking during pregnancy, high maternal BMI before pregnancy, and excessive maternal weight gain during pregnancy.

Childhood obesity-defined as having a BMI at or above the 95th percentile for a child's age and sex-is often the result of excess body fat. Without support or intervention, children with higher BMI patterns in early life are more likely to carry that weight into adolescence and adulthood, increasing their chances of developing serious health conditions like diabetes and heart disease.

The fact that we can identify unusual BMI patterns as early as age 3.5 shows how critical early childhood is for preventing obesity."

Chang Liu, PhD, ECHO researcher of Washington State University

The study included 9,483 children across the United States who are part of the ECHO Cohort. Researchers looked at weight and height data collected over time from medical records, caregiver reports, and in-person or at-home measurements. They tracked how children's BMI changed as they grew and looked for patterns related to experiences early in life. 

"Our findings suggest there are important opportunities to reduce childhood obesity, such as helping pregnant women quit smoking and manage healthy weight gain, as well as closely monitoring children who show early signs of rapid weight gain," said Liu.

This collaborative research is published in JAMA Network Open.

Source:

Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes

Journal reference:

Liu, C., et al. (2025). Early-Life Factors and Body Mass Index Trajectories Among Children in the ECHO Cohort. JAMA Network Open. doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.11835.


Source: http://www.news-medical.net/news/20250522/Early-childhood-weight-patterns-linked-to-future-obesity-risk.aspx

Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
guest

Targeting individual frailty traits may prevent falls among the elderly

A new research paper was published in Aging (Aging-US) Volume 17, Issue 4, on April 1, 2025, titled "Examining frailty...

New guideline aims to help primary care clinicians diagnose and treat hypertension

A new guideline to diagnose and treat hypertension is aimed at helping primary care clinicians, including family physicians,...

Sartorius octet® r8e: Revolutionizing biomolecular research

The life science group Sartorius launches the new Octet® R8e biolayer interferometry (BLI) system, providing researchers with its...

Muscle quality linked to cognitive health in middle age

Over the past decade, much research has focused on the connection between skeletal muscle health and cognitive disorders....

Genetic discovery sheds light on infection-triggered neuropathy

Neuropathy, a disorder in which damage to nerves can impair sensation and movement, has many causes, including infection....

Researchers prolong ketamine’s antidepressant benefits to two months

Roughly 10 percent of the U.S. population is afflicted with major depressive disorder at any given time, and...

Microbiome as the Key to Personalized Medicine: How Our Microbial Partners Shape Individual Health and Treatment Response

The human body represents a complex ecosystem where trillions of microorganisms coexist in intricate harmony with our cells,...

Wayne State research team tracks effects of bullying from high school to college

With funding from the Spencer Foundation, a private foundation focused on funding education studies, a Wayne State University...

Stress-induced sleep may hold the key to faster recovery

Is post-stress sleep the key to bouncing back? Scientists reveal how the brain turns stress into restorative sleep,...

Living in disadvantaged neighborhoods linked to earlier menopause

A new study led by the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute highlights the significant impact of living in...

Autophagy-based mechanism provides insight into Parkinson’s disease protein secretion

Intracellular protein trafficking and secretion of proteins into the extracellular environment are sequential and tightly regulated processes in...

Detecting balance impairments early could prevent life-threatening falls

As we get older, our bodies stop performing as they once did. We aren't as strong as we...

UTA researcher receives NIH grant to advance predictive disease models

Suvra Pal, an associate professor of statistics in The University of Texas at Arlington's Department of Mathematics, has...

Neurointerfaces in Medicine: From Function Restoration to Cognitive Enhancement

The convergence of neuroscience and technology has ushered in an unprecedented era of medical innovation, where the boundaries...

Study reveals continuing and worrying trend in excess US deaths

There were over 1.5 million "missing Americans" in 2022 and 2023, deaths that would have been averted if...

Trump’s team cited safety in limiting covid shots. patients, health advocates see more risk.

Larry Saltzman has blood cancer. He's also a retired doctor, so he knows getting covid-19 could be dangerous...

Powerful new toolkit targets vision loss in advanced retinal degeneration

Inherited retinal degenerations (IRDs) are a group of genetic disorders that lead to progressive vision loss as the...

Tufts researchers develop dental floss sensor for real time stress monitoring

Chronic stress can lead to increased blood pressure and cardiovascular disease, decreased immune function, depression, and anxiety. Unfortunately,...

Air pollution’s chemical punch alters immune markers in pregnant women, study finds

New research reveals that it’s not just the amount, but the oxidative power of air pollution that shifts...

Rare cancer gene found in sperm donor sparks European regulatory concerns

A case in which a sperm donor was later found to be carrying a cancer-causing pathogenic variant in...