Body composition: population epidemiology and concordance in Australian children aged 11-12 years and their parents.

Abstract:

OBJECTIVES:Overweight and obesity remain at historically high levels, cluster within families and are established risk factors for multiple diseases. We describe the epidemiology and cross-generational concordance of body composition among Australian children aged 11-12 years and their parents. DESIGN:The population-based cross-sectional Child Health CheckPoint study, nested within the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC). SETTING:Assessment centres in seven major Australian cities and eight regional cities, or home visits; February 2015-March 2016. PARTICIPANTS:Of all participating CheckPoint families (n=1874), body composition data were available for 1872 children (49% girls) and 1852 parents (mean age 43.7 years; 88% mothers), including 1830 biological parent-child pairs. MEASURES:Height, weight, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference and waist-to-height ratio for all participants; body fat and fat-free mass by four-limb bioimpedence analysis (BIA) at assessment centres, or body fat percentage by two-limb BIA at home visits. Analysis: parent-child concordance was assessed using (i) Pearson's correlation coefficients, and (ii) partial correlation coefficients adjusted for age, sex and socioeconomic disadvantage. Survey weights and methods accounted for LSAC's complex sample design. RESULTS:20.7% of children were overweight and 6.2% obese, as were 33.5% and 31.6% of parents. Boys and girls showed similar distributions for all body composition measures but, despite similar BMI and waist-to-height ratio, mothers had higher proportions of total and truncal fat than fathers. Parent-child partial correlations were greatest for height (0.37, 95% CI 0.33 to 0.42). Other anthropometric and fat/lean measures showed strikingly similar partial correlations, ranging from 0.25 (95% CI 0.20 to 0.29) for waist circumference to 0.30 (95% CI 0.25 to 0.34) for fat-free percentage. Whole-sample and sex-specific percentile values are provided for all measures. CONCLUSIONS:Excess adiposity remains prevalent in Australian children and parents. Moderate cross-generational concordance across all measures of leanness and adiposity is already evident by late childhood.

journal_name

BMJ Open

journal_title

BMJ open

authors

Clifford SA,Gillespie AN,Olds T,Grobler AC,Wake M

doi

10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023698

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2019-07-04 00:00:00

pages

95-105

issue

Suppl 3

issn

2044-6055

pii

bmjopen-2018-023698

journal_volume

9

pub_type

杂志文章,多中心研究

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