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Associations of growth trajectories from birth to two years of age with adolescent blood pressure: the mediating role of current BMI in the follow-up of an antenatal micronutrient supplementation trial

  • Jiaxin Tian
  • , Huilan Feng
  • , Dongqing Wang
  • , Xinyi Li
  • , Jiayu Shan
  • , Yingze Zhu
  • , Liang Wang
  • , Shaoru Li
  • , Danmeng Liu
  • , Kun Zhu
  • , Michael J. Dibley
  • , Lingxia Zeng
  • , Zhonghai Zhu
  • Xi'an Jiaotong University
  • The Fourth hospital in Xi’an
  • George Mason University
  • Northwest Women’s and Children’s Hospital
  • The First Affiliated Hospital of Xi’an Jiaotong University
  • The University of Sydney
  • Key Laboratory for Disease Prevention and Control and Health Promotion of Shaanxi Province

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

While early-life growth patterns are thought to be pivotal for long-term cardiovascular health, their specific links to adolescent blood pressure (BP) and potential mediators remain unclear. We aimed to examine the associations of growth trajectories from birth to age two with systolic and diastolic BP in adolescence, and to quantify the proportion mediated by concurrent adolescent BMI. In a prospective birth cohort in rural China, we repeatedly measured infant weight and length at birth and at 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months of age. Adolescent BP was measured and converted into percentiles. We used group-based trajectory modeling to identify early-life weight-, length-, BMI- and weight-for-length z-score trajectories and examined their associations with adolescent BP. A general causal mediation estimated the natural indirect effects and corresponding proportions mediated through adolescent BMI. Among the 1388 infants enrolled, 741 (60.9% male; mean age, 11.26 (SD, 0.57) years old) were followed at adolescence. Greater and rapid BMI and weight-for-length growth trajectories were statistically associated with elevated adolescent BP and BP percentiles, with adjusted mean differences ranging from 2.32 to 5.29 mmHg. Adolescent BMI mediated a substantial portion (up to 85%) of the association with systolic BP, but it showed no significant mediating effect for diastolic BP. Conclusion: Rapid adiposity growth in infancy predicts elevated adolescent BP. Since adolescent BMI did not fully explain this association, especially for diastolic BP, preventive interventions within the first 1000 days may be critical for lifelong cardiovascular health beyond managing later childhood weight. Trial registration: ISRCTN08850194, retrospectively registered December 14, 2006. https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN08850194?q=ISRCTN08850194&filters=&sort=&offset=1&totalResults=1&page=1&pageSize=10. (Table presented.)

Original languageEnglish
Article number87
JournalEuropean Journal of Pediatrics
Volume185
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2026

Keywords

  • Adolescent
  • Blood pressure
  • Causal mediation
  • Life-course epidemiology
  • Physical growth trajectory

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