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Unit on Growth and Obesity (A.F.F., N.A., M.D.R., J.C.H., K.R.T., S.Z.Y., J.A.Y.), Developmental Endocrinology Branch, and Division of Epidemiology, Statistics, and Prevention Research (A.V., J.T.), National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; and Division of Digestive Diseases and Nutrition (S.Z.Y.), National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Jack A. Yanovski, M.D., Ph.D., Head, Unit on Growth and Obesity, Developmental Endocrinology Branch, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Hatfield CRC, Room 1E-3330, 10 Center Drive, MSC-1103, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1103. E-mail: jy15i{at}nih.gov.
| Abstract |
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Methods: Children ages 612 yr at high risk for adult obesity because of early-onset childhood overweight and/or parental overweight were recruited from 19962004. Growth in body mass index (BMI) was studied in 197 children, and growth in total body fat mass was examined in 149 children over an average follow-up interval of 4.4 yr (range, 18 yr). Longitudinal analyses accounted for sex, race, socioeconomic status, initial body composition, age, skeletal age, and physical activity and included all available interim visits for each individual so that a total of 982 subject visits were included in the analysis.
Results: At baseline, 43% of children studied were overweight (BMI
95th percentile); during follow-up, an additional 14% became overweight. Independent of initial body composition, baseline leptin was a statistically significant positive predictor of increased BMI (P = 0.0147) and increased total body fat mass (P < 0.007).
Conclusions: High serum leptin, independent of body fat, may be an indicator of increased leptin resistance, which predisposes children at high risk for adult obesity to somewhat greater growth in weight and body fat during childhood.
| Introduction |
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The cross-sectional, positive relationship between body adiposity and serum leptin is well documented in both children and adults (2, 4). However, the influence of leptin on changes in weight over time is far less clear. In adults, both low (5) and high (6, 7, 8, 9) circulating leptin (adjusted for body size at baseline) have been reported to predict increased weight longitudinally; other studies have found no evidence of leptin predicting weight gain (10, 11, 12, 13, 14). Similarly, in children, both low (15, 16) and high baseline leptin (17, 18, 19) have been suggested to predict greater weight gain over time. However, previous pediatric studies have used relatively small cohorts and are somewhat difficult to evaluate and compare for several reasons. First, the studies used different outcome measures including body mass index (BMI), BMI Z-score, BMI percentile, total body fat mass, and percent total body fat. For studies in which fat mass was an outcome measure, two measured it using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (17, 18), one by skinfold thickness (15), one by bioelectrical impedance (16), and one by 18O dilution (18). Second, the studies each accounted for a different combination of potentially confounding variables. Third, these studies used a variety of statistical evaluations, with only one study (17) including interim follow-up visits in the analysis to model the pattern of adipose growth. Finally, only two studies (14, 15) have examined children at high risk for adult obesity, despite the fact that this represents a group in which better predictors of excessive fat gain are needed to assist clinicians in determining which children should be especially targeted for early intensive interventions. These fragmented and limited previous observations suggested the need to study a larger cohort of children with a long follow-up interval and inclusion of a greater number of potentially confounding variables as well as interim visits into a model of longitudinal weight change.
Based on the limitations of previous studies and the importance of evaluating a high-risk population, we conducted a prospective study of children at high risk for development of adult obesity to determine the influence of serum leptin as a predictor of growth in BMI and adiposity during childhood. We hypothesized that there would be a positive association between baseline serum leptin and increased fat mass over time in children at high risk for adult obesity because many such children would manifest leptin resistance out of proportion to their fat mass. We expected that children with the most severe leptin resistance would be relatively insensitive to leptins weight-regulating effects throughout childhood and would therefore have increased BMI and fat mass over time compared with children with leptin concentrations more commensurate with their fat mass.
| Subjects and Methods |
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Children aged 612 yr old were recruited by mailings sent to Washington, D.C., metropolitan area schools, by advertisements in local newspapers, and from referral by local physicians for participation in nonintervention studies of healthy volunteers (20) between 1996 and 2004. Recruitment efforts specifically targeted children who were at risk for adult obesity by virtue of their own overweight (BMI for age and sex
95th percentile for National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey standards) (21) or because of their parents overweight (at least one parent with BMI
25 kg/m2). To be recruited for the study, subjects were required to be medication-free for at least 2 wk before evaluation and to be in good general health. Exclusion criteria included current involvement in a weight-loss program and significant renal, hepatic, endocrinological, pulmonary (with the exception of asthma), and psychiatric disorders (with the exclusion of binge eating disorder) as determined by history and physical examination. These studies were carried out in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and were approved by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Institutional Review Board, which serves as the ethics committee for pediatric studies conducted by NICHD investigators. Each participant gave written assent, and each parent gave written consent for participation.
Procedures
Participants each underwent a structured history and physical examination including weight and height measurements at baseline and annually thereafter. Weight was obtained to the nearest 0.1 kg using a calibrated digital scale (Scale-Tronix, Wheaton, IL), and the average of three heights was obtained to the nearest 1 mm using a stadiometer calibrated before each set of measurements (Holtain Ltd., Crymych, UK). For height and weight determination, children were clothed with shoes removed, and measurements were obtained in the morning after a 12-h fast. Parental overweight was determined by measurement in the clinic for at least one parent and by parental report of weight and height for parents who did not attend the visit. Approximately three fourths of all children also underwent dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scans for total body fat mass determination at baseline and annually or semiannually thereafter (QDR 2000 pencil beam or 4500A fan beam densitometer; Hologic, Waltham, MA). The pencil beam mode and the fan beam mode instruments are both highly correlated with fat mass (22, 23, 24); however, compared with the pencil beam mode, the fan beam mode underestimates body fat mass in overweight children by approximately 2.47 kg (25). Therefore, in this study, 2.47 kg was added to all total body fat mass measurements determined by the fan beam mode. At baseline, roentgenograms of the left wrist were also obtained and skeletal age was evaluated by the method of Greulich and Pyle (26). Skeletal maturation has been shown to be a good proxy for pubertal maturation even in those with an abnormal tempo of growth (27). DEXA and skeletal age measurements were performed by members of the radiology staff who did not have access to information other than basic demographics of the subject. One radiologist determined all bone age readings. Socioeconomic status (SES) at baseline was determined by Hollingsheads two-factor index of social status (28).
At baseline, subjects also completed physical activity questionnaires to document their volitional physical activity during the past year. This questionnaire was developed for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Growth and Development Study to assess physical activity level (29, 30, 31). Questionnaires listed 33 common activities including sports such as baseball, basketball, gymnastics, and swimming as well as more childhood-specific activities such as climbing ropes/monkey bars and playing on a playground. Metabolic equivalent (MET) values were assigned to the activities based on Ainsworths updated compendium (32). For cases in which the description of the activity in the questionnaire did not specifically match the description of an activity listed in the updated compendium, a consensus among the researchers determined the most closely matched activity for MET value determination, with the majority view accepted. On the questionnaire, subjects were instructed to mark the number of seasons per year, days per week, and minutes per day during which they participated in a given activity so that MET hours per week could be estimated.
Serum samples for determination of leptin were obtained between 0800 and 1000 h after an overnight fast. A fasted state was encouraged to be reported truthfully by providing compensation for the visit regardless of whether the subject reported having fasted. Leptin was measured by commercially available assays [Linco Diagnostics, St. Charles, MO (n = 187), or Mayo Medical Laboratories New England, Wilmington, MA (n = 10)] that were found not to differ significantly in the relationship between measured value and body fat mass (data not shown). The functional sensitivity for the leptin assay was 0.40.5 ng/ml; intraassay and interassay variabilities were less than 8% and less than 18%, respectively.
Statistical analysis
Longitudinal analyses assessed the function of baseline leptin concentration to predict BMI and total body fat mass over time. BMI, rather than BMI SD score, was modeled as the primary outcome measure based on the data of Cole et al. (33) showing that when children are followed longitudinally, BMI is a superior measure to assess changes in adiposity. A secondary analysis modeled BMI SD score calculated according to the Centers for Disease Control LMS method (34). Correlation between measures taken on the same individual at different times was modeled using a spatial model with exponentially decreasing correlation as the time interval increases. The analyses accounted for sex, race, socioeconomic status, age, skeletal age, and physical activity level and included all available interim visits for each individual. Baseline BMI and total fat mass were included as independent variables in their respective analyses. Leptin concentration, BMI, and fat mass showed positively skewed distributions and were therefore log-transformed for all analyses. To model leptin and total body fat, we created a repeated-measures model (35) using SAS PROC MIXED. Initially, all variables (including powers of age up to fourth order) and their interactions with age were included in the model. Terms were removed sequentially according to highest P value until only terms with P < 0.05 remained. Main effects for categorical factors were retained until all interactions with the factor were removed.
| Results |
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For the longitudinal analysis modeling baseline serum leptin as a predictor of change in BMI (Table 2
), baseline leptin (P = 0.0147) significantly predicted increased BMI over time in both girls (Fig. 2A
) and boys (Fig. 2B
). This result was found after taking into account correlations between annual BMI measurements and baseline BMI (P < 0.0001), baseline age (P < 0.0001), follow-up age (P < 0.0001), sex by follow-up age (P < 0.0001), and baseline leptin by follow-up age (P = 0.0022). After accounting for these factors, race, SES, and reported physical activity did not significantly impact growth in BMI nor were their interactions with other variables significant; therefore, they were not included in the final model. Compared with those with baseline leptin measurements in the lowest tertile, children with baseline leptin in the highest tertile were estimated by the model to have gained an additional 1.2 kg/m2 between age 8 and 18 yr (Fig. 2
). When this analysis was used to model change in BMI Z-score over time, baseline leptin remained a significant predictor (P = 0.0005) of increased BMI Z-score over time, as did baseline BMI Z-score, baseline age, follow-up age, and baseline leptin by follow-up age. Sex no longer impacted the model, because it was incorporated into the baseline BMI Z-score measurement.
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| Discussion |
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This study confirms and extends previous observations of obese children (n = 68) (19), obese Pima Indian children (n = 132) (18), and African-American and Caucasian children of typical weight distribution (n = 85) (17) that have found higher leptin to predict increased weight over time and contrasts with other smaller investigations (n < 40) that found the reverse relationship (15, 16). In addition to its larger sample size, the present investigation was strengthened compared with previous studies by separate modeling according to gender and race, a statistical analysis that incorporated multiple potentially confounding variables, and fat mass measured by DEXA as an outcome variable. Particularly during childhood and adolescence when muscle, organ, and bone mass may be changing at varying rates, body fat mass is a more accurate measure of adiposity than BMI (36, 37). The only other pediatric leptin study that measured fat mass by DEXA (17) also found a positive relationship between leptin and adiposity growth over time.
In contrast to two other pediatric studies (15, 17) that found leptin to predict weight gain only in females, we found that high serum leptin predicted increased weight in both males and females. These previous studies used total sample sizes that may have been too small (n = 40 and n = 68) to permit reliable subdivision by sex, although somewhat smaller effects of high leptin in males (+5.2 kg additional fat mass) than in females (+11.8 kg additional fat mass) were estimated by the model in the current study. It also appeared that there was a diminished impact of baseline serum leptin to predict adiposity growth during puberty particularly among the non-Caucasian boys in the study (Fig. 3
). However, additional research is necessary to confirm this relationship, as the interaction term for leptin by race by follow-up age did not reach significance in the model (Table 2
). Our models also suggest a decreased velocity of growth in fat mass in late puberty, particularly in boys (Fig. 3
), which is consistent with increased deposition of muscle mass during this time period and is in concordance with the existing literature (38). As has also been found previously (39), this postpubertal decline in fat mass growth appears to be less pronounced in Caucasian girls. However, from these models, which were formulated to test the role of leptin on weight change, firm conclusions cannot be drawn about the influence of sex and ethnicity on overall fat mass trajectory.
Skeletal age, physical activity, and SES did not independently predict increases in BMI or fat mass in these models. The physical activity measures obtained via questionnaire relied on subjects responses, which may not have accurately represented their physical activity (40) and might thus have affected the questionnaires ability to predict growth of BMI or fat mass. However, several other previous studies have likewise found physical activity, assessed either by questionnaire (41) or estimated using stable isotope methods (30, 41, 42, 43, 44), not to predict weight change during adolescence. Measures of fitness, rather than of actual physical activity may ultimately be seen as superior for the purpose of assessing how activity impacts weight change (44). Larger sample sizes or approaches that can reliably estimate activity over very long periods of time may be needed before activity measurements can be shown to contribute to weight change in children. Similarly, a considerably larger sample size may be needed to separate the effects of age from those of skeletal age. In addition to the need for a larger sample size and better methods to estimate physical activity to answer some research questions, there are other limitations of the study. These include the recruitment only of subjects living near Washington, D.C., and the fact that, in some instances, more than one child in a single family was enrolled in the study and that virtually all children had at least one overweight parent. Finally, because of limitations related to sample size, analyses of the associations between leptin and weight gain could not be performed separately for the non-overweight and overweight children in the study.
The ability of serum leptin to predict increases in body fat mass in children at high risk for adult obesity contrasts with studies in adults in which leptin was not a good predictor of future weight change (10, 11, 12, 13, 14). In children, inherent leptin resistance may be a more salient indicator of risk for greater adipose growth than it is in adults, who have had a larger period of exposure to environmental conditions that predispose to weight gain and have had an opportunity to manifest the effects of genes affecting body weight that may have a later onset of action. This study thus also demonstrates that caution must be exercised when extrapolating data from adults to children or from normal-weight children to children at high risk for obesity, highlighting the potential differences in the control mechanisms for energy intake and expenditure that may be present in those with early-onset overweight.
There is a need for additional prospective, longitudinal studies to explore the role of leptin to predict weight gain in children who are not already identified as at risk for overweight by their own or their parents weight status. If leptin concentration in these non-overweight children is associated with the development of overweight, it could be used as a biomarker to identify at-risk children. Furthermore, additional studies are warranted to evaluate the predictive role of leptin compared with other known predictors of weight gain such as birth weight, maternal smoking during pregnancy, history of breastfeeding, time spent watching television, parental obesity (45, 46), and insulin concentration (47, 48, 49, 50). Indeed, there is an established relationship between hyperleptinemia and hyperinsulinemia (51, 52). A few (53, 54, 55, 56, 57), but not all (58, 59), longitudinal studies in adults have actually suggested that high insulin sensitivity and low fasting plasma insulin are associated with increased weight gain, whereas insulin resistance may protect against weight gain. Conflicting data also exist for children, with both positive (47, 50) and negative (48, 49) associations reported between insulin and changes in fat mass. Thus, there is a clear need for future studies to elucidate the relationship between insulin and leptin as predictors of changes in weight over time. Future studies should also examine the role of insulin and how it relates to leptin as a predictor of increases in weight and body fat mass in both overweight and non-overweight children.
The present study may be of particular clinical interest because it is specifically applicable to elementary school-aged children believed to be at risk for adult obesity. As children pass through adolescence to adulthood and height stabilizes, weight status becomes even more tightly correlated to the comorbidities associated with obesity. Where previous research has been limited and contradictory, this study more definitively documents the importance of serum leptin as a marker that predicts future weight in children already identified as at risk for adult obesity and may assist in selecting the subset of those who are most in need of weight monitoring and early, intensive intervention.
| Footnotes |
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J.A.Y. and J.C.H. are Commissioned Officers in the U.S. Public Health Service, Department of Health and Human Services.
Disclosure Statement: The authors have nothing to disclose.
First Published Online December 19, 2006
Abbreviations: BMI, Body mass index; DEXA, dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry; MET, metabolic equivalent; SES, socioeconomic status.
Received June 29, 2006.
Accepted December 7, 2006.
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