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Fetal and Infant Growth Patterns and Kidney Function at School Age
Authors:Hanneke Bakker  Romy Gaillard  Oscar H Franco  Albert Hofman  Albert J van der Heijden  Eric AP Steegers  H Rob Taal  Vincent WV Jaddoe
Institution:*The Generation R Study Group, and;Departments of Epidemiology.;Pediatrics, and;§Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:Low birth weight is associated with ESRD. To identify specific growth patterns in early life that may be related to kidney function in later life, we examined the associations of longitudinally measured fetal and infant growth with kidney function in school-aged children. This study was embedded in a population-based prospective cohort study among 6482 children followed from fetal life onward. Fetal and childhood growth was measured during second and third trimesters of pregnancy, at birth, and at 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 months postnatally. At the age of 6 years, we measured kidney volume by ultrasound. GFR was estimated using blood creatinine levels. Higher gestational age-adjusted birth weight was associated with higher combined kidney volume and higher eGFR (per 1 SD score increase in birth weight; 1.27 cm3 95% confidence interval, 0.61 to 1.93] and 0.78 ml/min per 1.73 m2 95% CI, 0.16 to 1.39], respectively). Fetal weight, birth weight, and weight at 6 months were positively associated with childhood kidney volume, whereas higher second trimester fetal weight was positively associated with higher GFR (all P values<0.05). Fetal and childhood lengths were not consistently associated with kidney function. In this cohort, lower fetal and early infant weight growth is associated with smaller kidney volume in childhood, whereas only lower fetal weight growth is associated with lower kidney function in childhood, independent of childhood growth. Whether these associations lead to an increased risk of kidney disease needs to be studied further.Low birth weight is associated with higher risks of ESRD and hypertension in later life.13 Clearly, low birth weight is not the causal factor per se leading to kidney diseases in later life. Birth weight is the result of various exposures and growth patterns in fetal life and the starting point of childhood growth. It has been hypothesized that especially third trimester fetal growth restriction leads to persistently smaller kidneys with a reduced number of nephrons, which may predispose the individual to kidney disease in adulthood.46 This hypothesis is supported by both animal and human studies, showing that kidney volume and nephron number are reduced in fetal growth-restricted subjects and hypertensive subjects.79 Although nephrogenesis is known to continue until 36 weeks of gestation and cease thereafter, not much is known about the specific critical periods and early growth patterns related to kidney function in later life.10 Also, whether and to what extent the associations of low birth weight with CKD are explained by preterm birth are not known.1 Longitudinal studies suggested that the associations of low birth weight with hypertension were stronger in subjects with rapid weight gain in childhood, but results are inconclusive.11,12 A similar growth pattern has not been identified as a risk factor for kidney diseases yet.Prospective studies linking fetal and early childhood growth patterns to kidney outcomes in later life might help to identify early critical periods for developing impaired kidney function in later life.Therefore, we examined, in a population-based prospective cohort study among 6482 children followed from early fetal life onward (Figure 1), the associations of birth weight, gestational age, birth weight for gestational age, and longitudinally measured fetal and early childhood growth patterns with kidney size and function at school age. We used subclinical variations of kidney function in childhood as outcomes, because they relate to kidney disease in later life.13Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Flow chart: exclusion criteria and numbers of participants are given. Total numbers of available outcome measurements are given.
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