Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Childhood obesity predicted by infant BMI


 

AT ENDO 2016

References

BOSTON – Infants above the 85th percentile for body mass index at 6 months are up to nine times more likely to be severely obese by the age of 6, according to a Cincinnati Children’s Hospital investigation.

The finding means that pediatricians should routinely plot and follow body mass index (BMI) from an early age, just like height, weight, and head circumference, said investigator Dr. Allison Smego, an endocrinology fellow.

She and her colleagues reviewed the charts from birth to age 6 of 783 lean children and 480 children above the 99th BMI percentile. BMI started differentiating when children were as young as 4 months old, about a year and half before the onset of clinical obesity. The predictive value of the 85th percentile threshold held at 6, 12, and 18 months. The finding was subsequently validated in over 2,600 children.

In an interview at the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society, Dr. Smego explained how to use the findings.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

aotto@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Phone-based intervention helps drain sugary drinks from preschoolers’ diet
MDedge Pediatrics
Metformin did not improve glycemic control in type 1 diabetes
MDedge Pediatrics
Experts call for international cooperation on human gene editing
MDedge Pediatrics
Antidepressants highly effective against binge-eating disorder
MDedge Pediatrics
67% of teens have substantial cardiometabolic risk burden, blood donor survey shows
MDedge Pediatrics
Does poverty predetermine pediatric obesity?
MDedge Pediatrics
Redefining care model could improve pediatric obesity prevention, treatment
MDedge Pediatrics
How new dietary guidelines affect health care providers
MDedge Pediatrics
Rapid growth, childhood obesity tied to fish and pregnancy
MDedge Pediatrics
Pediatric BMI increases linked to rises in blood pressure, hypertension risk
MDedge Pediatrics