Publication

Associations between maternal body mass index and childhood infections in UK primary care: findings from the Born in Bradford birth cohort study

Open Access
Archives of Disease in Childhood
2024

Objective

To explore associations between maternal body mass index (BMI) in early pregnancy and childhood infections.

Design

Birth cohort study linked to primary care records.

Setting

Bradford, UK.

Participants

Live singleton births within the Born in Bradford cohort study between 2007 and 2011.

Exposures

Maternal BMI in early pregnancy.

Main outcome measures

The total number of infections between birth and ~14 years of age with subgroup analysis by infection type and age.

Results

A total of 9037 mothers and 9540 children were included in the main analysis. 45% of women were of Pakistani ethnicity and 6417 women (56%) were overweight or obese. There was an overall trend for an increasing infection rate with increasing maternal BMI. In adjusted models, only those with obesity grade 2–3 had offspring with significantly higher rates of infection during the first year of life (RR 1.12 (95% CI 1.05 to 1.20)) compared with women of healthy weight. However, by age 5 to <15 years, children born to overweight women (RR 1.09 (95% CI 1.02 to 1.16)), obese grade 1 women (RR 1.18 (95% CI 1.09 to 1.28)) or obese grade 2 women (RR 1.31 (95% CI 1.16 to 1.48)) all had significantly higher rates of infection compared with those born to healthy weight mothers. Respiratory tract and skin/soft tissue infections made up the majority of excess infections.

Conclusions

Maternal BMI was positively associated with rates of offspring infection in this study cohort, and suggests that we should be supporting women to achieve a healthy weight for pregnancy. Future research should investigate whether this is replicated in other populations, whether there is a causal association and the potential mechanisms and areas for intervention.

Access type

Open

Journal name

Archives of Disease in Childhood

Volume

Volume 110, Issue 1

Publication date

2024

DOI identification

10.1136/archdischild-2024-326951

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