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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

PURPOSE: The 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 t...

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Autores principales: Laraia, Barbara, Brownell, Kristy, Friebur, Robin, Perera, Rachel, Brown, Erika, Mayer, Stefanie E, Feng, Ingrid, Clermont, Sabrina, Ritchie, Lorrene D, Epel, Elissa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10632866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37931968
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072957
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author Laraia, Barbara
Brownell, Kristy
Friebur, Robin
Perera, Rachel
Brown, Erika
Mayer, Stefanie E
Feng, Ingrid
Clermont, Sabrina
Ritchie, Lorrene D
Epel, Elissa
author_facet Laraia, Barbara
Brownell, Kristy
Friebur, Robin
Perera, Rachel
Brown, Erika
Mayer, Stefanie E
Feng, Ingrid
Clermont, Sabrina
Ritchie, Lorrene D
Epel, Elissa
author_sort Laraia, Barbara
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: The 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. PARTICIPANTS: Beginning 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 DATE: Longitudinal 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 PLANS: New 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 NUMBER: NCT00005132.
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spelling pubmed-106328662023-11-10 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 Laraia, Barbara Brownell, Kristy Friebur, Robin Perera, Rachel Brown, Erika Mayer, Stefanie E Feng, Ingrid Clermont, Sabrina Ritchie, Lorrene D Epel, Elissa BMJ Open Epidemiology PURPOSE: The 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. PARTICIPANTS: Beginning 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 DATE: Longitudinal 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 PLANS: New 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 NUMBER: NCT00005132. BMJ Publishing Group 2023-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC10632866/ /pubmed/37931968 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072957 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Epidemiology
Laraia, Barbara
Brownell, Kristy
Friebur, Robin
Perera, Rachel
Brown, Erika
Mayer, Stefanie E
Feng, Ingrid
Clermont, Sabrina
Ritchie, Lorrene D
Epel, Elissa
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
title 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
title_full 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
title_fullStr 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
title_full_unstemmed 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
title_short 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
title_sort 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
topic Epidemiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10632866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37931968
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072957
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