학술논문

Cohort profile: the longitudinal National Growth and Health Study (NGHS) of black and white girls from Northern California tracking how behavioural and psychosocial risk factors predict cardiovascular risk and biological ageing in midlife and in offspring
Document Type
article
Source
BMJ Open. 13(11)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Cardiovascular
Clinical Research
Pediatric Research Initiative
Nutrition
Behavioral and Social Science
Pediatric
Prevention
Aetiology
2.3 Psychological
social and economic factors
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Child
Female
Humans
Male
Young Adult
Aging
Biomarkers
Body Mass Index
California
Cardiovascular Diseases
Heart Disease Risk Factors
Longitudinal Studies
Risk Factors
Thinness
White
Child
Preschool
EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDIES
Health Equity
PUBLIC HEALTH
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Other Medical and Health Sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Psychology
Language
Abstract
PurposeThe National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Growth and Health Study (NGHS) prospectively collected anthropometric, biospecimens, clinical, health behaviour and psychosocial measures associated with cardiovascular disease from childhood to young adulthood. The aim of the current study was to assess the impact of stress, dysregulated eating and social genomic biomarkers on cardiometabolic risk factors among the original participants now in midlife and their children.ParticipantsBeginning in 1987-1988, NGHS recruited black and white girls (age 9-10 years) from socioeconomically diverse backgrounds from from three sites: Cincinnati, Ohio; Washington, DC; and Western Contra Costa County, California (N=2379) and followed them for 10 years. The study maintained an 89% retention rate. The current study is 30 years after the start of the original study and focused on the participants of California (n=887) and their children aged 2-17 years. We re-enrolled 624 of 852 eligible participants (73%): 49.2% black and 50.8% white. The mean age was 39.5 years. Among the 645 eligible biological children, 553 were enrolled; 49% black and 51% white, with 51.5% girls and 48.5% boys. The mean age was 9.3 years.Findings to dateLongitudinal analysis of adolescent drive for thinness predicted higher scores for drive for thinness during midlife, which was indirectly associated with greater adult body mass index through adult drive for thinness. Latent trajectory modelling of adolescent growth over 10 years found that women with persistently high weight trajectory had twice the odds of having children who met the definition for obesity compared with the persistently normal group, adjusting for adult weight.Future plansNew studies on neighbourhood socioeconomic status, food insecurity and additional biomarkers of chronic stress, microbiome and accelerated ageing (ie, telomere length and epigenetic clock) are underway. We are developing a 10-year follow-up to understand changes in ageing biomarkers of the participants and their children.Trial registration numberNCT00005132.