BMJ 2003;327:904-905 (18 October), doi:10.1136/bmj.327.7420.904
Paper
Breast feeding and obesity in childhood: cross sectional study
L Li, statistical research fellow1,
T J Parsons, lecturer1,
C Power, professor1
1 Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 1EH
Correspondence to: L Li L.Li{at}ich.ucl.ac.uk
Introduction
The evidence that breast feeding protects against obesity is
inconclusive: some studies show a protective effect
1 and others
find no effect.
2
3 Confounding factors may account for these
inconsistencies. We used data from the offspring of the 1958
British birth cohort to assess whether breast feeding influences
body mass index and obesity in childhood.
Methods and results
We used data from a randomly selected sample (n = 2584) of the
members of the 1958 British birth cohort who had children by
1991.
4 Information was collected on their offspring. Of 3077
children aged 4-18 years, we included 2631 children (1293 girls
and 1338 boys from 1768 families; average age 8 years) for whom
data on duration of breast feeding, body mass index, and confounding
factors were available.
Body mass index (weight (kg)/(height (m)2)) was standardised relative to the 1990 British growth reference,5 and obesity was defined as a standard deviation score > 1.64 (95th centile). Duration of breast feeding had been reported by the mother in 1991 (see table for categories).
View this table:
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Relation of duration of breast feeding to mean body mass index (BMI) and odds ratio for obesity* in children aged 4-18 years in 1991
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Potential confounding factors, reported in 1991, were birth weight; mother's smoking during pregnancy (< 1 cigarette/day, 1-9/day, or
10/day); and social class, based on the 1991 occupation of the male head of household, classified as professional or managerial, skilled non-manual, skilled manual, or semiskilled or non-skilled. Parent's body mass index was derived from height and weight and standardised within the study by sex. The body mass index of the parent (only one parent was the cohort member) was available for each child.
The multilevel models that we used to estimate the relation between body mass index and duration of breast feeding (linear model) and between obesity and duration of breast feeding (logistic model) took into account the correlation between siblings. We used the iterative generalised least squares procedure (MLwiN statistical package) to calculate outcomes for ages 4-8 and 9-18 separately. We calculated odds ratios before and after adjusting for sex, parent's body mass index, maternal smoking during pregnancy, birth weight, and social class.
In our sample, 62.9% of children (1655) had been breast fed for
1 week. The mean score for body mass index in all children was higher than the growth reference sample by 0.18. A total of 207 children (7.9%) were obese. Mean body mass index and obesity were consistently lower in those breast fed for 2-3 months, though not significantly (table). We found no evidence that breast feeding influenced body mass index or obesity and no dose dependent trend in either age group; adjustment for confounding factors did not alter these findings. That there was no difference in the relation between the age groups suggests that recall bias was not an important factor.
Comment
As in the 1958 birth cohort,
3 results from their offspring provide
no support for a protective effect of breast feeding on obesity.
In studies reporting a protective effect, it is weak and not
always supported by a dose-response relation, which might be
expected, at least up to a threshold duration. Any effect of
breast feeding may be limited to a critical period or depend
on other cofactors. Secular trends do not suggest a protective
effect: in both Britain and the United States the incidence
of breast feeding has increased since 1990, but so has obesity.
Promoting breast feeding is important, but evidence for an important
beneficial effect on obesity is still equivocal.
Data were obtained from Centre for Longitudinal Studies, Institute
of Education; National Child Development Study Composite File
including selected perinatal data and sweeps one to five [computer
file]; National Birthday Trust Fund, National Children's Bureau,
City University Social Statistics Research Unit [original data
producers]; The Data Archive [distributor], Colchester, Essex:
SN:3148. 1994.
Contributors: All authors designed the study and wrote the paper. LL did the data analysis and is guarantor.
Funding: TJP holds a Medical Research Council special training fellowship in health services and health of the public research.
Conflict of interest: None declared.
Ethical approval: Not needed.
References
- Gillman MW, Rifas-Shiman SL, Camargo CA, Jr, Berkey CS, Frazier AL, Rockett HR, et al. Risk of overweight among adolescents who were breastfed as infants. JAMA
2001;285: 2461-7.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Hediger ML, Overpeck MD, Kuczmarski RJ, Ruan WJ. Association between infant breastfeeding and overweight in young children. JAMA
2001;285: 2453-60.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Parsons TJ, Power C, Manor O. Infant feeding and obesity through the lifecourse. Arch Dis Child
2003;8: 793-4.
- Ferri E. Life at 33: the fifth follow-up of the National Child Development Study. London: National Children's Bureau, 1993.
- Cole TJ, Freeman JV, Preece MA. Body mass index reference curves for the UK, 1990. Arch Dis Child
1995;73: 25-9.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
(Accepted August 18, 2003)

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