Objectives:
To describe the association and its
magnitude between body mass index category, sex, and cardiovascular
disease risk parameters in school aged children in highly developed
countries.
Systematic review and meta-analysis.
Quality of included studies assessed by an adapted version of the
Cochrane Collaboration’s risk of bias assessment tool. Results of
included studies in meta-analysis were pooled and analysed by Review
Manager version 5.1.
Embase, PubMed, EBSCOHost’s
cumulative index to nursing and allied health literature, and the Web
of Science databases for papers published between January 2000 and
December 2011.
Healthy children aged 5 to 15 in highly
developed countries enrolled in studies done after 1990 and using
prospective or retrospective cohort, cross sectional, case-control,
or randomised clinical trial designs in school, outpatient, or
community settings. Included studies had to report an objective
measure of weight and at least one prespecified risk parameter for
cardiovascular disease.
We included 63 studies of 49 220
children. Studies reported a worsening of risk parameters for
cardiovascular disease in overweight and obese participants. Compared
with normal weight children, systolic blood pressure was higher by
4.54 mm Hg (99% confidence interval 2.44 to 6.64; n=12 169, eight
studies) in overweight children, and by 7.49 mm Hg (3.36 to 11.62;
n=8074, 15 studies) in obese children. We found similar associations
between groups in diastolic and 24 h ambulatory systolic blood
pressure. Obesity adversely affected concentrations of all blood
lipids; total cholesterol and triglycerides were 0.15 mmol/L (0.04 to
0.25, n=5072) and 0.26 mmol/L (0.13 to 0.39, n=5138) higher in obese
children, respectively. Fasting insulin and insulin resistance were
significantly higher in obese participants but not in overweight
participants. Obese children had a significant increase in left
ventricular mass of 19.12 g (12.66 to 25.59, n=223), compared with
normal weight children.
Having a body mass index outside the
normal range significantly worsens risk parameters for cardiovascular
disease in school aged children. This effect, already substantial in
overweight children, increases in obesity and could be larger than
previously thought. There is a need to establish whether acceptable
parameter cut-off levels not considering weight are a valid measure
of risk in modern children and whether methods used in their study
and reporting should be standardised.
BMJ 2012;345:e4759
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