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Characterizing Long-Term Patterns of Weight Change in China Using Latent Class Trajectory Modeling
Authors:Lauren Paynter  Elizabeth Koehler  Annie Green Howard  Amy H Herring  Penny Gordon-Larsen
Institution:1Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill NC, United States of America;2Department of Biostatistics, Gillings School of Global Public Health at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill NC, United States of America;3Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill NC, United States of America;National Institute of Agronomic Research, FRANCE
Abstract:BackgroundOver the past three decades, obesity-related diseases have increased tremendously in China, and are now the leading causes of morbidity and mortality. Patterns of weight change can be used to predict risk of obesity-related diseases, increase understanding of etiology of disease risk, identify groups at particularly high risk, and shape prevention strategies.MethodsLatent class trajectory modeling was used to compute weight change trajectories for adults aged 18 to 66 using the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS) data (n = 12,611). Weight change trajectories were computed separately for males and females by age group at baseline due to differential age-related patterns of weight gain in China with urbanization. Generalized linear mixed effects models examined the association between weight change trajectories and baseline characteristics including urbanicity, BMI category, age, and year of study entry.ResultsTrajectory classes were identified for each of six age-sex subgroups corresponding to various degrees of weight loss, maintenance and weight gain. Baseline BMI status was a significant predictor of trajectory membership for all age-sex subgroups. Baseline overweight/obesity increased odds of following ‘initial loss with maintenance’ trajectories. We found no significant association between baseline urbanization and trajectory membership after controlling for other covariates.ConclusionTrajectory analysis identified patterns of weight change for age by gender groups. Lack of association between baseline urbanization status and trajectory membership suggests that living in a rural environment at baseline was not protective. Analyses identified age-specific nuances in weight change patterns, pointing to the importance of subgroup analyses in future research.
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