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Birth weight of offspring and insulin resistance in late adulthood: cross sectional survey
Authors:Debbie A Lawlor  George Davey Smith  Shah Ebrahim
Affiliation:Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 2PR
Abstract:ObjectiveTo investigate the association between birth weight of offspring and mothers'' insulin resistance in late adulthood.DesignCross sectional survey.SettingGeneral practitioner''s surgeries in 23 towns in Great Britain.Participants4286 women aged 60-79 years.ResultsBirth weight of offspring was inversely related to maternal insulin resistance in late adulthood. For each 1 kg higher birth weight of offspring, women had a 15% reduction in the odds of being in the fourth with highest insulin resistance, compared to other fourths (odds ratio 0.85; 95% confidence interval 0.71 to 1.00). This increased to 27% (0.73; 0.60 to 0.90) after adjusting data for potential confounders. A U shaped relation between birth weight of offspring and diabetes in older age was found; women with the lightest and heaviest offspring had the highest prevalence of diabetes.ConclusionsBirth weight of offspring is inversely related to the mother''s insulin resistance in late adulthood, despite the association of glucose intolerance during pregnancy with heavier offspring at birth. Common genetic factors contribute to the relation between birth weight and risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in adults.

What is already known on this topic

Small birth weight is related to increased risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in adulthood; the underlying mechanisms are unclearSmall birth weight of offspring is related to parental cardiovascular disease, suggesting that common genetic factors affect birth weight and the risk of disease in adulthoodGenetic factors associated with the metabolism of insulin are plausible in linking birth weight and cardiovascular disease (the fetal insulin hypothesis)

What this study adds

Birth weight of offspring is inversely related to maternal insulin resistance in older ageGenetic factors related to both insulin resistance and birth weight explain at least part of the association between birth weight and risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in adulthood
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