Prenatal tobacco and cannabis co‐exposure and offspring obesity development from birth to mid‐childhood
Summary Background Although the association between prenatal tobacco exposure and child obesity risk is well‐established, less is known about co‐exposure to tobacco and cannabis. Objective Determine the relation between prenatal substance co‐exposure and obesity risk. Methods In a diverse sample of...
Saved in:
Published in | Pediatric obesity Vol. 18; no. 5; pp. e13010 - n/a |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Chichester, UK
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
01.05.2023
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Summary: | Summary
Background
Although the association between prenatal tobacco exposure and child obesity risk is well‐established, less is known about co‐exposure to tobacco and cannabis.
Objective
Determine the relation between prenatal substance co‐exposure and obesity risk.
Methods
In a diverse sample of pregnant women, we examined the association between prenatal substance exposure (tobacco‐only and co‐exposure) and child BMI (kg/m2) trajectories from birth to mid‐childhood (n = 262), overweight/obese status based on BMI percentiles from toddlerhood (24 months) to mid‐childhood (9–12 years), and adiposity outcomes at mid‐childhood (fat mass [kg], fat mass [%] and fat free mass [kg]; n = 128). Given that the major goal of this study was to examine the associations between prenatal substance exposure and child outcomes, we oversampled pregnant women for substance use (with tobacco as the primary focus).
Results
Multilevel models demonstrated that children in both exposure groups had a steeper increase in BMI trajectory from birth to mid‐childhood and among co‐exposed children, girls had a steeper increase than boys. Odds ratio of having obesity by mid‐childhood was 12 times higher among those co‐exposed than non‐exposed. Co‐exposure led to significantly greater fat mass and fat mass % compared with no exposure, but exposure to only tobacco was no different than no exposure.
Conclusions
Results highlight potentiating effects of cannabis exposure in the context of maternal tobacco use in pregnancy on obesity risk and the importance of multi‐method assessments of obesity. |
---|---|
Bibliography: | Funding information National Institute on Drug Abuse, Grant/Award Numbers: R01DA019632, R21DA04564002; National Institutes of Health ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 2047-6302 2047-6310 |
DOI: | 10.1111/ijpo.13010 |