Article Text
Abstract
Objective To investigate growth trajectories from age 2.5 to 19 years in individuals born before 26 weeks of gestation (extremely preterm; EP) compared with term-born controls.
Methods Multilevel modelling of growth data from the EPICure study, a prospective 1995 birth cohort of 315 EP participants born in the UK and Ireland and 160 term-born controls recruited at school age. Height, weight, head circumference and body mass index (BMI) z-scores were derived from UK standards at ages 2.5, 6, 11 and 19 years.
Results 129 (42%) EP children were assessed at 19 years. EP individuals were on average 4.0 cm shorter and 6.8 kg lighter with a 1.5 cm smaller head circumference relative to controls at 19 years. Relative to controls, EP participants grew faster in weight by 0.06 SD per year (95% CI 0.05 to 0.07), in head circumference by 0.04 SD (95% CI 0.03 to 0.05), but with no catch-up in height. For the EP group, because of weight catch-up between 6 and 19 years, BMI was significantly elevated at 19 years to +0.32 SD; 23.4% had BMI >25 kg/m2 and 6.3% >30 kg/m2 but these proportions were similar to those in control subjects. EP and control participants showed similar pubertal development in early adolescence, which was not associated with height at 19 years in either study group. Growth through childhood was related to birth characteristics and to neonatal feeding practices.
Conclusions EP participants remained shorter and lighter and had smaller head circumferences than reference data or controls in adulthood but had elevated BMI.
- extremely preterm
- cohort studies
- growth trajectories
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What is already known on this topic?
Poor growth attainment in early childhood and early adolescence has been reported for extremely preterm (EP) survivors.
Growth data beyond adolescence are scarce in such populations.
What this study adds?
EP participants remained shorter and lighter and had smaller head circumferences than reference data or term-born controls in adulthood, despite catch-up growth.
Trajectories in height and head circumference were similar in EP and control participants, but weight, and therefore body mass index, rose faster among EP individuals.
Birth characteristics and neonatal feeding practices were related to growth over childhood to 19 years.
Introduction
Poor growth attainment in early childhood and early adolescence has been reported for extremely preterm (EP) survivors (<26 weeks of gestation).1–3 Growth data beyond adolescence are scarce in such populations. Several studies have reported growth outcomes in young adulthood for very low birthweight (VLBW; <1500 g) or extremely low birthweight (ELBW; <1000 g) children.4–8 However, the findings were in populations defined by birth weight rather than gestational age, which may introduce bias because more mature children with intrauterine growth restriction were included.9 Additionally, these studies only included individuals born in the 1970s–1980s. Advances in perinatal and neonatal care in the 1990s markedly improved the survival rates of EP infants, which may impact long-term growth.
We conducted a longitudinal analysis of growth from infancy to early adulthood for individuals evaluated in the EPICure study, a large prospective, population-based cohort of EP births. At 2.5 and 6 years, all main growth parameters were significantly below population norms.2 3 The main objective of this paper was to investigate growth trajectories in EP children to 19 years compared with those of a term-born comparison group. Our secondary objectives were to explore the impact of neonatal variables and important childhood outcomes, and to examine pubertal development in early adolescence and its association with growth attainment in adulthood. We hypothesised that EP children would demonstrate poorer growth than controls in young adulthood, but that this might be offset by delayed puberty and catch-up growth.
Methods
Participants
The EPICure cohort comprised all babies born at 25 completed weeks of gestation or less in all 276 maternity units in the UK and Ireland from March to December 1995. Recruitment of the cohort has been described in detail previously10–12; 315 survived to discharge and were followed at ages 2.5, 6, 11 and 19 years. Nine deaths occurred between discharge and the 19-year assessment, at which 129 (42%) of EP participants were assessed. A flow chart detailing dropout and recruitment of controls has been published previously.13 Written informed consent was obtained from parents up to 11 years and from individual participants at 19 years. Ethical approval was obtained for each follow-up assessment.
Measures
Participants were invited for a comprehensive evaluation at 11 and 19 years, which included physical assessment of growth by a paediatrician or paediatric nurse. Assessors were not informed of the child’s group status. Weight, height and occipitofrontal head circumference were measured. Measurement at ages 2.5 and 6 years has been described in detail previously.2 3 At 11 and 19 years, height was measured using a portable height measure; length or arm span was used in participants unable to stand. Weight was measured using standard paediatric metric scales and head circumference using a non-distensible Lasso-o tape. All parents and children were asked to complete an anonymised questionnaire about pubertal development at 11 years based on Tanner staging.14–16 Self-assessment can be validly used for large epidemiological studies for evaluating sexual maturation in children, although studies of outcomes that are strongly dependent on precise staging of pubertal development must ensure correct assessment by standardised clinical examination.17 18 Body mass index (BMI) was calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in metres squared. SD scores (z-scores) for height, weight, BMI and head circumference were calculated at each age based on UK population norms.19 Overweight and obesity were defined using internationally accepted cut-offs of 25 and 30 kg/m2, respectively.19
Neonatal variables were obtained from the main study database, including gestational age, birth weight for gestational age (a measure of intrauterine growth), ethnicity (white vs other), neonatal brain injury (defined as moderate/severe injury: ventricular size >4 mm over 97th centile/haemorrhage/cysts/cystic leukomalacia or any unilateral/bilateral parenchymal problem13), enteral feeding begun before day 7 (yes vs no) and the number of weeks of steroid therapy for chronic lung disease. Cognitive outcomes have been reported previously.11–13 20
Statistical analysis
Data were analysed using Stata V.15.1. Multilevel modelling was used to investigate growth trajectories from infancy to adulthood. It treats the data as having a hierarchical structure with observations at each time point nested within each individual, which allows adjustment for missing observations where the individual was not assessed. When comparing the EP and control groups, age was fitted as a random effect. This allows both the average level and the change in z-scores to vary between individuals. A group term was added as a fixed covariate to test for a difference in intercept between the EP and control groups. An interaction term between age and group was then added to test whether the EP and control groups differed in slope. The effects of sex were examined by adding them separately to the model as a fixed covariate and then as interactions with group. For a parameter to be retained in the model, it was required to have a p value <0.05. Similar analyses were then conducted within the EP group to test the effects of neonatal variables. Analyses were first conducted in all participants with data available at any time point, and then restricted to those with complete longitudinal data only. Relationships between puberty and growth trajectories were also explored using multilevel modelling.
As previously we had observed an association between cognitive scores and head circumference,2 relationships of head size with cognition/attainment at different ages were analysed using multiple linear regression models. We adjusted for neonatal brain injury, gestational age and sex for EP participants, and sex for controls.
Results
Participants and attrition
Characteristics of EP participants and term-born controls by age of assessment are shown in table 1. Progressive loss to follow-up occurred for the EPICure cohort over the period of 19 years, and similar attrition occurred in the control group. EP completers (no missing growth assessments) were more likely than non-completers (one or more missing assessments) to be from multiple births and to have parents with a non-manual occupation, and were less likely to have severe motor disability at 2.5 years (see online supplementary table S1) but in other respects the cohort included in this analysis was representative of the total original cohort.
Supplemental material
Growth trajectories
Mean z-scores for growth measures in EP participants were significantly below zero from age 2.5 to 19 years; at 19 years, height was −0.98 SD, weight −0.25 SD and head circumference −0.84 SD; because of discrepant catch-up in weight rather than height, BMI z-scores increased faster from 6 to 19 years to be on average 0.32 SD greater than population means (table 1). In the EP group the trajectory of weight (and therefore BMI) z-scores showed a greater relative increase between 6 and 11 years, with a subsequent trajectory similar to controls over adolescence to 19 years (figure 1). Trajectories in height and head circumference were similar in EP and control participants. Similar findings were present when compared with controls: at 19 years, on average EP individuals were 4.0 cm shorter and 6.8 kg lighter with a 1.5 cm smaller head circumference relative to controls; mean BMI in EP individuals was 23.3 kg/m2 (95% CI 22.6 to 24.1); 23.4% (30/128) met criteria for overweight and 6.3% (8/128) for obese, and were not significantly different from controls in whom mean BMI was 24.7 kg/m2 (95% CI 23.3 to 26.1). There were no sex differences in either group. At 11 years, 13.8% (30/217) of EP children met criteria for overweight and 0.9% (2/217) for obese, lower than controls (overweight: 17.1%; obese: 4.0%), but the differences were not statistically significant (p=0.089). EP participants who were overweight or obese at 11 years were at higher risk of being overweight or obese at 19 years (relative risk 3.16, 95% CI 1.97 to 5.07; p<0.001).
From age 2.5 to 19 years, using multilevel modelling z-scores for height were on average 0.83 SD lower in EP participants compared with controls, weight 0.94 SD lower and head circumference 1.22 SD lower (all p<0.001; table 2). Using multilevel modelling, EP participants on average showed a catch-up gain in weight by 0.06 SD per year (0.05 to 0.07), BMI by 0.08 SD (0.07 to 0.10) and head circumference by 0.04 SD (0.03 to 0.05; all p<0.001), but no evidence of catch-up in height. There were no significant differences between z-scores of males and females for all four growth measures in either group at each age (table 2 and online supplementary figure S1a).
Impact of neonatal variables
We evaluated the influence of neonatal factors on growth over 19 years within EP participants using multilevel models (table 3). Birth weight for gestational age was related to height and head circumference trajectories (all p<0.001) and white ethnicity to height and weight at ages 2.5, 6 and 11 years but not at 19 years (see online supplementary figure S1b). Gestational age, despite the narrow range among this group (23–25 weeks), was significantly related to head growth (p<0.001). The variable ‘enteral feeds begun before day 7’ was positively related to all outcomes except for height at 19 years (see online supplementary figure S1c), but other neonatal variables, including neonatal brain injury and the use of long courses of postnatal steroid (commonly used in 1995), were not related to growth in this model. All analyses were repeated among participants who were examined at each age with essentially similar findings (see online supplementary tables S2 and S3). Some significances were reduced but the direction and magnitude of effects were similar.
Puberty and growth in adulthood
EP boys and girls at age 11 reported similar pubertal development compared with term-born boys and girls. Proportions who had entered puberty were 15% for boys in both groups, 40% for EP girls. This compared with 32% for term-born girls (p=0.301; online supplementary table S4). At 11 years, EP and term-born girls (but not boys) who have entered puberty were significantly taller than prepubescent peers. In contrast, by 19 years, height did not differ with pubertal status at 11 years in either boys or girls for both groups (figure 2; online supplementary table S5).
Head size and cognition/attainment
In the EP group, reduced head circumference z-scores were positively correlated with lower IQ and attainment scores at each age, which remained significant after adjustment for neonatal brain injury, sex and gestational age, and after excluding participants with severe motor disability (coefficients ranging from 1.98 to 5.67; online supplementary table S6).
Discussion
We report growth trajectories from infancy to early adulthood in EP survivors born in 1995. Growth patterns in height and head circumference were similar in EP participants and term-born controls, but EP participants remained shorter and lighter and had smaller head circumferences than reference data or controls. With the exception of height, multilevel modelling shows evidence of catch-up growth in the EP group throughout childhood and adolescence, for weight by 0.06 SD per year and head circumference by 0.04 SD. In this clinical cohort, catch-up was greatest in weight, and therefore BMI, between 6 and 11 years but similar proportions of EP and control participants were considered overweight or obese at 19 years. We evaluated a range of possible influences on growth to 19 years. Pubertal status at 11 years was not associated with final height but in the group that commenced enteral feeds in the first week, better childhood and adolescent growth was found. Head size was associated with IQ score at 19 years.
It is hard to make direct comparisons with other studies of growth attainment in adulthood in preterm children, as they have focused on VLBW/ELBW survivors, which included children born at higher gestations who were small for gestational age and had a higher mean birth weight and gestational age.4–6 8 This report supports findings from the Canadian cohort of 147 ELBW children.6 In contrast, among 42 ELBW participants from Victoria, Australia, average weight was attained by early adulthood.4 A further study conducted in Cleveland, Ohio, reported complete catch-up in weight among VLBW females in young adulthood, but not among males.5 The authors argue that this might be related to the lesser neonatal and early childhood morbidity among VLBW females.5 We did not find significant differences between males and females in any growth measure in either EP or control groups.
Both groups showed similar pubertal development in early adolescence, in agreement with previous studies.7 21 22 Pubertal status at 11 years was unrelated to final height in both groups, again in support of previous findings.23 24 Early sexual maturity has been reported in LBW/VLBW girls,25 26 but this was not demonstrated in our study. We did not collect information on parental height or determine bone age, but final height is dependent on mid-parental height,4 21 although in VLBW children advanced bone age in adolescence may contribute to shorter height in adulthood.22
Irrespective of size at birth, mean BMI in the EP group and controls at age 19 was significantly above the 1990 UK population standards, indicating that they were relatively heavy for their height. In previous cohorts it normalised but was not significantly different from population norms.4 6 We show greater relative catch-up in BMI among EP participants than among term-born controls over time, consistent with the Swedish cohort.1 The rates of overweight (23%) and obesity (6%) for EP participants in young adulthood are much higher than those reported in the 1990 UK population at age 18—around 10% for overweight and 1% for obesity,19 but the findings are consistent with those among controls and may reflect secular trends. There is accumulating evidence that low birth weight together with rapid growth in weight or BMI in childhood is associated with increased risk for cardiovascular diseases in adult life.27–30 We also show that EP participants being overweight/obese at 11 years were at increased risk of being overweight/obese at 19 years. Early interventions can help prevent obesity among young people.
Associations of subnormal head size with poor developmental outcomes have been reported for VLBW children at school age.22 31 We show that the positive relationship between head size and cognitive outcomes persists into early adulthood, despite improved growth velocity in head circumference. Consistent with our previous reports,2 3 head size in the EP cohort at 11 and 19 years continued to be significantly associated with birth characteristics, being smaller for babies born at lower gestational ages (0.46 SD per week) and those with low birth weight for gestation (0.38 SD per birth weight SD).
Within the EP cohort, birth weight for gestational age predicted height and head size at all ages, indicating that intrauterine growth has an important effect on growth into adulthood. In adulthood, head size was smaller in EP participants receiving long courses of postnatal steroid. Short-term detrimental effects of long courses of postnatal steroid on growth have been reported in premature children.2 3 32 33 EP children appeared to have better growth in weight and BMI in early adulthood following early introduction of enteral feeding. Nutritional practices varied greatly among neonatal intensive care units, reflecting both lack of evidence and strong local traditions.34 Our findings show an association but randomised trials are needed to show causation and this may reflect a group of individuals with less severe neonatal illness.
The strength of this study lies in the longitudinal design with data collected at multiple ages. Other strengths are the inclusion of a comparison group and the use of multilevel modelling to partially account for attrition, and the validation analysis of individuals with complete follow-up. The major weakness is that the number of participants lost to follow-up increased over time and dropout was associated with markers of social disadvantage and disability. However, our findings were strengthened by the analysis of individuals with complete follow-up which corroborated the main results, and there were no significant differences in growth measures between participants with complete and incomplete data. Growth trajectories from participants with complete data were similar compared with all participants (see online supplementary figure S2). Controls were recruited at age 6 years, and thus we did not have measures in early childhood for comparison.
In conclusion, impaired growth over the postnatal period among EP births, related to birth characteristics and feeding patterns, was reflected in lower linear growth and smaller head circumferences, associated with lower cognitive attainment over childhood to 19 years. In contrast, rapid increase in weight relative to height between 6 and 11 years led to elevated average BMI values in this group.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the EPICure cohort participants for their continued contribution to this study.
References
Footnotes
Twitter @Yanyan_Ni
Contributors YN contributed to the analysis and interpretation of data, drafted the first version of the manuscript and revised it for important intellectual content. JB assisted in the design of the 19-year follow-up study, collected the data, and reviewed and revised the manuscript for intellectual content. RG, JRH and JKM critically reviewed and revised the manuscript for intellectual content. NM conceptualised and designed the study, obtained funding, supervised data collection, and critically reviewed and revised the manuscript. All authors approved the final manuscript as submitted and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Funding This study was funded by the Medical Research Council UK (MRC Ref MR/J01107X/1). NM receives a proportion of funding from the Department of Health’s NIHR Biomedical Research Centres funding scheme at UCLH/UCL.
Disclaimer NM declares consultancy fees from Novartis and Shire; other authors have no financial relationships to disclose.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent for publication Not required.
Ethics approval The study at 19 years was approved by the South Central Hampshire A Research Ethics Committee (Ref: 13/SC/0514).
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Data availability statement Data are available subject to the EPICure Data Sharing Policy (www.epicure.ac.uk).
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