In the study of more than 1,000 mother-child pairs, each additional
serving of sugary soda per day consumed in pregnancy was associated
with higher increments of waist size and body mass in kids years
later.
“Sugary beverages have been linked to obesity in children and
adults,” said study author Sheryl Rifas-Shiman of Harvard Medical
School in Boston.
Although past research has tied sodas and some fruit drinks to
excess weight gain, obesity, metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes,
few have looked at beverage intake during pregnancy, she and her
colleagues write in Pediatrics.
“Childhood obesity is widespread and hard to treat,” Rifas-Shiman
told Reuters Health by email. “So it’s important to identify
modifiable factors that occur prenatally and during infancy so
prevention can start early.”
The researchers recruited 1,078 women from among patients at eight
obstetric offices affiliated with Atrius Harvard Vanguard Medical
Associates in eastern Massachusetts.
The study team had in-person meetings with each woman at the end of
her first and second trimesters, as well as during the first few
months after her baby was born. In addition, kids were assessed in
early childhood, around age 3, and in mid-childhood, around age 8.
Mothers also completed mailed questionnaires every year for the
child’s first six birthdays.
At all visits, researchers collected information about both parents
and details of the household. During pregnancy, women answered
questionnaires about what they typically ate and drank, including
how much regular and sugar-free soda, fruit juice, fruit drinks and
water they consumed each day.
At the mid-childhood visit, when kids were between ages 6 and 11
years, the research team measured each child’s height, weight, waist
circumference and skinfold thickness. With these measurements, they
calculated body fat percentage and body mass index (BMI), a measure
of weight relative to height.
When researchers looked at data gathered during pregnancy, they
found that more than half of mothers had consumed more than half a
serving a day of non-diet soda during pregnancy, and nearly 10
percent had consumed two or more servings a day.
Mothers who drank more sugary drinks during pregnancy tended to be
younger, had higher prepregnancy BMI, lower education, lower income,
shorter breastfeeding times and were more likely to have smoked
during pregnancy.
[to top of second column] |
About one quarter of the children were overweight or obese by
mid-childhood, and BMI, waist circumference and skinfold thickness
were highest among kids whose mothers drank at least two servings of
sugary drinks per day.
Only regular sodas were associated with this difference. Juice, diet
soda and water consumed during pregnancy weren’t linked to a higher
BMI score in kids. The research team also didn’t see differences
based on the mother’s weight, race or ethnicity, the child’s gender
or the amount of soda children themselves drank.
“I was surprised that maternal intake seemed to be more important
than child intake,” Rifas-Shiman noted.
In the future, she and colleagues plan to study the long-term
effects of efforts to reduce sugary beverage intake during
pregnancy. They’re now using new methods to analyze when children's
intake of sugary beverages matters the most for their weight and
health.
“I was struck that the differences in children’s body composition
were seen in relation to intake levels that appear unremarkable,
even less than one serving per day,” said Sian Robinson of the
University of Southampton in the UK, who wasn’t involved in the
study.
“We need to know more about the long-term effects of maternal
nutrition on offspring health,” she told Reuters Health by email.
“Few intervention studies in pregnancy have longer-term follow-up
data to describe the effects on children’s body composition.”
Several of these intervention studies have been completed recently,
Robinson added, and that follow-up data will be available soon.
“The links between sugar-sweetened beverages and obesity are
well-established,” she said. “But this new data suggests mothers’
consumption is important and has public health relevance.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2tIwJju Pediatrics, online July 10, 2017.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |