Association of adolescent obesity with risk of severe obesity in adulthood

Citation

The, N. S.; Suchindran, C.; North, K. E.; Popkin, B. M.; & Gordon-Larsen, P. (2010). Association of adolescent obesity with risk of severe obesity in adulthood. JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association. vol. 304 (18) pp. 2042-2047 , PMCID: PMC3076068

Abstract

Context Although the prevalence of obesity has increased in recent years, individuals who are obese early in life have not been studied over time to determine whether they develop severe obesity in adulthood, thus limiting effective interventions to reduce severe obesity incidence and its potentially life-threatening associated conditions.

Objective To determine incidence and risk of severe obesity in adulthood by adolescent weight status.

Design, Setting, and Participants A cohort of 8834 individuals aged 12 to 21 years enrolled in 1996 in wave II of the US National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, followed up into adulthood (ages 18-27 years during wave III [2001-2002] and ages 24-33 years during wave IV [2007-2009]). Height and weight were obtained via anthropometry and surveys administered in study participants' homes using standardized procedures.

Main Outcome Measures New cases of adult-onset severe obesity were calculated by sex, race/ethnicity, and adolescent weight status. Sex-stratified, discrete time hazard models estimated the net effect of adolescent obesity (aged <20 years; body mass index [BMI] ≥95th percentile of the sex-specific BMI-for-age growth chart or BMI ≥30.0) on risk of severe obesity incidence in adulthood (aged ≥20 years; BMI ≥40.0), adjusting for race/ethnicity and age and weighted for national representation.

Results In 1996, 79 (1.0%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.7%-1.4%) adolescents were severely obese; 60 (70.5%; 95% CI, 57.2%-83.9%) remained severely obese in adulthood. By 2009, 703 (7.9%; 95% CI, 7.4%-8.5%) non–severely obese adolescents had become severely obese in adulthood, with the highest rates for non-Hispanic black women. Obese adolescents were significantly more likely to develop severe obesity in young adulthood than normal-weight or overweight adolescents (hazard ratio, 16.0; 95% CI, 12.4-20.5).

Conclusion In this cohort, obesity in adolescence was significantly associated with increased risk of incident severe obesity in adulthood, with variations by sex and race/ethnicity.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1001%2Fjama.2010.1635

Keyword(s)

Obesity

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association

Author(s)

The, N. S.
Suchindran, C.
North, K. E.
Popkin, B. M.
Gordon-Larsen, P.

Year Published

2010

Volume Number

304

Issue Number

18

Pages

2042-2047

DOI

10.1001/jama.2010.1635

PMCID

PMC3076068

Reference ID

1254