# Weight Change and Accumulation of Chronic Conditions in Women During Reproductive Years

**Authors:** Mohammad R. Baneshi, Annette Dobson, Gita D. Mishra

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/oby.70023 · Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.) · 2025-09-02

## TL;DR

This study found that weight gain and obesity in young women are linked to a higher risk of developing multiple chronic health conditions later in life.

## Contribution

The study identifies how BMI changes during reproductive years are associated with multimorbidity risk and quantifies annual weight gain patterns before and after chronic condition diagnoses.

## Key findings

- Stable obesity and increasing BMI were linked to a higher risk of incident multimorbidity.
- Women with chronic conditions gained more weight annually compared to those without conditions.
- Weight gain decreased after diagnosis but remained higher than in women without conditions.

## Abstract

We examined the association between BMI change and risk of multimorbidity among women of reproductive age and estimated annual weight gain before and after diagnosis of chronic conditions.

Data were from 8895 women in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health who had no chronic conditions at baseline. BMI from Survey 1 (ages 18–23) and Survey 3 (ages 25–30) defined BMI change categories. Linear mixed models estimated annual weight gain from Survey 1 to Survey 9 (ages 43–49).

Compared to stable normal BMI, stable obesity and increasing BMI were associated with a higher risk of incident multimorbidity (OR = 1.79 [95% CI: 1.11, 2.90] and 1.34 [1.10, 1.63]). Women who remained free of chronic conditions gained 0.50 kg (0.48, 0.52) annually. Women with one condition gained 0.54 kg (0.52, 0.56): 0.55 (0.53, 0.57) before and 0.54 (0.51, 0.57) after diagnosis. Those with multimorbidity gained 0.65 kg (0.63, 0.67): 0.75 kg (0.70, 0.80) before the first, 0.60 kg (0.56, 0.64) between the first and second, and 0.57 kg (0.53, 0.61) after the second condition.

Although weight gain declined after diagnosis, it remained higher than among women without conditions, underscoring the need for improved post‐diagnosis weight management.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Chronic Conditions (MESH:D002908), Weight (MESH:D015431), weight gain (MESH:D015430), obesity (MESH:D009765)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12559782/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12559782