Sex-Specific Associations of Childhood BMI Patterns with Cardiometabolic Risk: An 11-Year Korean Longitudinal Study
Hyo-Jin Kim, Sarang Jeong, Joo Hyun Lim, Dankyu Yoon

TL;DR
This study finds that maintaining childhood overweight status is linked to higher cardiometabolic risks in adolescence, with differences between boys and girls.
Contribution
The study identifies sex-specific cardiometabolic risks associated with childhood overweight maintenance using longitudinal data from Korea.
Findings
Boys maintaining childhood overweight had higher BMI, waist circumference, and liver enzyme levels in adolescence.
Girls maintaining childhood overweight had elevated BMI, blood pressure, and earlier puberty onset.
Overweight maintenance in childhood is linked to adverse cardiometabolic outcomes in adolescence.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Childhood overweight/obesity status is a critical risk factor for adverse cardiometabolic outcomes. We aimed to evaluate the sex-specific associations between a maintained childhood overweight status and late-adolescent cardiometabolic risk factors using data from a Korean longitudinal study. Methods: We used data from the Korean Children-Adolescents Study, a prospective cohort of children enrolled at age 7 and followed annually from 2005 to 2020. Among participants who were followed at least once, a total of 899 children (438 boys, 461 girls) with consistent body mass index (BMI) status at ages 7–9 and 10–12 were included in the analysis. Participants were categorized into two groups on the basis of BMI: normal weight maintenance and overweight maintenance. Multivariable linear regression was used to examine the associations between BMI patterns and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBirth, Development, and Health · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Diet and metabolism studies
