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BMJ 2004;328:11 (3 January), doi:10.1136/bmj.37942.603970.9A (published 5 December 2003)
Pär Sparén, senior researcher1, Denny Vågerö, professor2, Dmitri B Shestov, professor3, Svetlana Plavinskaja, senior researcher3, Nina Parfenova, researcher3, Valeri Hoptiar, programmer3, Dominique Paturot, research assistant4, Maria Rosaria Galanti, senior researcher5
1 Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden, 2 Centre for Health Equity Studies, CHESS, Stockholm University/Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden, 3 Institute of Experimental Medicine, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, St Petersburg, Russia, 4 Södertörns högskola, University College, Huddinge, Sweden, 5 Unit of Clinical Epidemiology, Department of Medicine, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden
Correspondence to: P Sparén Par.Sparen{at}meb.ki.se
Design Analysis of cardiovascular risk factors and mortality in a longitudinal follow up after the 1941-4 siege of Leningrad. Mortality measured from 1975 up to the end of 1999.
Setting St Petersburg, Russia (formerly Leningrad).
Participants 5000 men born 1916-35 who lived in Leningrad, randomly selected to take part in health examinations in 1975-7. Of the 3905 men who participated, a third had experienced the siege.
Main outcome measures Relative risk of ischaemic heart disease and mortality from stroke by siege exposure. Odds ratios and means for several cardiovascular risk factors.
Results Three to six decades after the siege, in men who experienced the siege around the age of puberty blood pressure was raised (mean difference in systolic 3.3 mm Hg, in diastolic 1.3 mm Hg) as was mortality from ischaemic heart disease (relative risk 1.39, 95% confidence interval 1.07 to 1.79) and stroke (1.67, 1.15 to 2.43), including haemorrhagic stroke (1.71, 0.90 to 3.22). The effect on mortality was partly mediated via blood pressure but not by any other measured biological, behavioural, or social factor.
Conclusions Starvation, or accompanying chronic stress, particularly at the onset of or during puberty, may increase vulnerability to later cardiovascular disease.
Follow up of 549 children born in or near Leningrad before or during the siege, however, concluded that there was no effect of intrauterine malnutrition on blood pressure, glucose intolerance, or lipid concentrations in adult life.6 Studying the Dutch hunger winter Roseboom et al concluded that starvation in mid or late fetal period did not carry an increased risk of an atherogenic lipid profile7 or heart disease later in life,8 while exposure in early gestation did. Bygren et al reported no excess mortality (at age 40-70) among individuals starved during the whole fetal period.9 In contrast, those who starved during part of it (early or late) were more likely to die from stroke. Kannisto et al, studying Finnish birth cohorts born around the 1866-8 famine, concluded that starvation in utero, infancy, or early childhood was not linked to mortality in adult life (at age 17-80).10 Typically, groups who experienced starvation during (part of) fetal life were compared with groups starving in other parts of fetal or early life, on the assumption that only one specific fetal period programs vulnerability to a specific disease.
These inconsistencies call for a more precise understanding of how and when starvation affects health. Does starvation outside the fetal period, say maternal starvation before pregnancy or offspring's starvation after birth, also have long term effects? Recent work on self starvation among young girls cautions against narrowing the age interval of exposure in studies of malnutrition or starvation.11 Before the fetal origins hypothesis most research did use a broader exposure.12-14 Kermack et al suggested that "the important factor from the point of view of the health of the individual during his life is his environment up to age of say 15 years."12
We studied the long term health consequences of involuntary starvation in a population of men who were aged 6-28 years at the peak of the period of severe food shortage. German troops prevented supplies from reaching Leningrad from 8 September 1941 to 27 January 1944. Of a population of 2.9 million (including 0.5 million children), 630 000 died from hunger-related causes,15 most during the winter of 1941-2. We investigated whether experience of the siege did in fact lead to an increased risk of mortality, particularly from cardiovascular disease.
We followed mortality from the time of the interview to 31 December 1999. The vital status of the cohort members was ascertained through contacts with the participants themselves and their relatives or neighbours. Address bureaux were used for those who had moved. The 132 participants who were lost before the end of follow up were censored at the last day of contact. We obtained death certificates to determine the date of death and coded cause according to ICD-8 (international classification of diseases, eight revision) (cardiovascular 390-458, ischaemic heart disease 410-414, stroke 430-438, and haemorrhagic stroke 430-431). We coded cause of death carefully and usually only after contact with the hospital where the person had been registered. The lipid research clinics study focused especially on circulatory disease. Due to a mistake during the initial interviews we did not have information for certain socioeconomic and behavioural variables for 672 men. Sensitivity analysis showed that risk estimates were virtually identical between the full and the restricted sample.
Food shortage
From 20 November 1941 bread rations in Leningrad were at their lowest: 250 g daily for manual workers and 125 g for other civilians. Children below the age of 12 belonged to the latter category, but children over 12 years received even lessfor example, only 200 g of fat, 800 g of sugar, and 600 g of carbohydrate a month. If rations were received in full, which was not always the case, this amounted to about 460 calories a day.15 Stanner et al estimated the average daily ration to be around 300 calories, containing virtually no protein.6 This is extremely low, even compared with rations during the Dutch hunger winter.1
Statistical analyses
We used Poisson regression to calculate relative risks, where the number of deaths was weighted by the person years at risk in each combination of the explanatory variables.17 Residence in Leningrad during the siege (yes/no) and age at siege (
8, 9-15, 16-26 years v not in siege) were introduced into successive regression models with other explanatory factors. We always controlled for birth year and attained age. Likelihood ratio tests were used to test models against each other.18 We examined whether there was any difference in risk of mortality between those living in Leningrad during the siege and those who were not; whether any effect was modified by age at exposure; and whether any effect was of similar magnitude during the whole follow up period.
To assess socioeconomic confounding we adjusted risk estimates for marital status (married, not married, divorced, widowed), education (university degree, incomplete university, up to 10 years of schooling, up to 7 years, less than 7 years, and no schooling), and occupational class (manual, non-manual, and other) at baseline (interview). We also adjusted for smoking and alcohol consumption. Smoking was grouped into ever or never and alcohol consumption (frequency of drinking in the week before the interview) into four categories (never, every day, 3-4 times a week, 1-2 times a week or less often).
Intermediate outcomesnamely, adult body mass index, adult height, skinfold thickness measured at the arm, diastolic and systolic blood pressure, and the ratio of low to high density lipoprotein cholesterolwere considered as potential mediators between starvation and later cardiovascular disease. BMI was classified into overweight versus normal (
25 v < 25) and obese versus normal and overweight (
30 v < 30), which were analysed separately; skinfold thickness and cholesterol ratio were dichotomised at the mean plus one SD (15.3 mm and 4.0, respectively). Body height was dichotomised at the mean minus one SD (163 cm). Blood pressure was categorised as normal or raised (systolic
160 mm Hg; diastolic
95 mm Hg). The latter included those on medication for high blood pressure. We used biological risk indicators as dichotomised outcome variables in logistic regression models18 to estimate odds ratios by siege experience. They were also treated as continuous outcome variables in linear regression models to estimate mean differences.
We carried out two tests for heterogeneity. A likelihood ratio test indicated whether the outcome was equally likely in each of the four categories (age at siege:
8, 9-15, 16-26, and not in siege). A Wald test showed whether the effect was the same in ages 9-15 as in ages
8 or 16-26.
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During follow up 2048 of the 3905 men died. Cardiovascular disease accounted for 1050 deaths (51%), 662 from ischaemic heart disease and 333 from stroke, 97 of which were haemorrhagic. The excess risk of dying (all causes) for those who experienced the siege was 21% (relative risk 1.21, 1.10 to 1.32) (data not shown).
Table 2 (restricted sample) shows the excess risk of dying from ischaemic heart disease (1.28, 1.08 to 1.51). Among those aged 9-15 at the peak of starvation this estimate was 1.39 (1.07 to 1.79). The effects of starvation around puberty were stronger still for stroke (1.67, 1.15 to 2.43), including haemorrhagic stroke (1.71, 0.90 to 3.22). For stroke, but not for other mortality, the siege effect was significantly stronger for those who experienced it around puberty than at other ages (Wald test P = 0.02).
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Adjustment for occupation, education, marital status, smoking, or alcohol consumption had no impact on risk estimates, although all these variables were themselves strongly correlated with mortality. Among those aged 9-15 years adjustment for systolic and diastolic blood pressure changed risk estimates downwards from 1.39 to 1.29 for ischaemic heart disease, from 1.67 to 1.49 for stroke, and from 1.71 to 1.51 for haemorrhagic stroke. Addition of other intermediate outcomes rendered small changes.
Throughout the follow up period there was a pattern of higher cardiovascular mortality for those who experienced the siege (figure). This was particularly pronounced in 1987-91, when those who did not experience the siege seemed to have a reduced risk. The period specific relative risk was 1.79, based on the main effect and a highly significant interaction (P = 0.004) effect (1.55, 1.16 to 2.08) (data not shown).
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Starvation around puberty (ages 9-15) was more strongly associated with high systolic blood pressure and stroke in adult life than was starvation at other ages. This casts new light on the effect of severe malnutrition in early life. We used the age limit of 9 years on the basis of work by Marshall and Tanner, who considered "the fat spurt" to be the earliest manifestation, or trigger, of puberty that is visible before age 10.19
Literature on anorexia nervosa details several cardiovascular abnormalities in patients, including reduction of ventricular mass, valvular dysfunctions,20 and electrocardiographic abnormalities.21 Damage of the myocardial fibres has been documented in obese patients on very low calorie diets.22 Furthermore, endocrine changes accompany self starvation around puberty.23 At least two of these changesincreased circulating concentrations of growth hormone and cortisolprofoundly influence regulation of blood pressure. Increased secretion of growth hormone is linked with hypertension.24 25 Critical stages in the process of regulating blood pressure may therefore occur during puberty,26 27 and starvation may cause a permanent disruption of blood pressure regulation.
An early study of the siege concluded that the immediate effect of starvation was a lowering of blood pressure. However, overcompensation occurred on refeeding. In people who have to do hard physical work blood pressure may rise as a consequence of refeeding after starvation.28
29 Limited food supplies reached Leningrad from the spring of 1942 across Lake Ladoga. Keys et al refers to the subsequent "refeeding after starvation" in 1943.30 A sample of 10 000 healthy people in Leningrad examined in April 1943 showed that the distribution of blood pressure had shifted radically upwards compared with that in 1940. The prevalence of hypertension had increased fourfold among those under age 39 and twofold among those aged
40 years. This "Leningrad blockade hypertension epidemic" remains visible in our data over three decades after the blockade.
Possible biases
We considered several methodological problems to rule out any potential bias.
SelectionThe death toll during the 1941-4 siege was extreme. Death rates of survivors in 1944-75 may also have been increased. Siege survivors examined in 1975-7 constituted a group of individuals selected for better genetic, constitutional, and social resources for health than other study participants. This selection should bias our estimates of the mortality effects of starvation downwards.
Narrow exposure contrastFood shortage was common all over Russia during the war, especially in areas occupied by the Germans. Livestock and harvests were appropriated for German needs, and not distributing food to the Russian population was part of the German war strategy.31 Therefore we are comparing boys and men exposed to protracted starvation with those who experienced less severe food shortage, including episodes of starvation, which results in conservative risk estimates.
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Residual confoundingWe assessed potential confounding factors at only one point in time (1975-7). Although all of them were strongly associated with mortality, they had little confounding effect. Residual confounding is therefore likely to be small.
Differential ascertainment of deathThe researchers who traced the movements of cohort members and collected death certificates did not know the siege status of participants. After the last date of contact we excluded from the study individuals who moved from Leningrad. A bias could occur if this follow up was imperfect and if men who had not experienced the siege were more likely to leave Leningrad for some reason. We found no such evidence.
Conclusions
On balance, our estimates of risks caused by siege exposure are probably conservative, perhaps very much so. It is difficult to suggest pathways, other than raised blood pressure, by which starvation causes cardiovascular mortality. Other potential mediating factors (for example, endocrine changes32
33) were not measured at all, and thus remain hypothetical. The nutritional component of starvation is also entangled with the trauma of the siege.
Work predating the fetal origins hypothesis had a broader focus, which included childhood exposures. Our study indicates that puberty may also be a highly vulnerable period. Our risk estimates for the period around puberty are at least as high as those calculated for fetal starvation, corresponding to reduced birth weights of 500-600 g. Starvation in puberty today may have implications for future cardiovascular disease in many developing countries. War is still a leading cause of starvation and this may have consequences for circulatory disease decades later.
Contributors: DV had the original idea for the paper. PS did the data analyses, assisted by DP. PS and DV wrote the first versions of the paper together and discussed all the details with DS. DS was responsible for the follow up and tracing of cohort members, in which SP, NP, and VH took part. MRG contributed with her expertise in child health and development. All authors commented on the final version of the paper. PS and DV are the guarantors of the paper.
Funding: Swedish Baltic Sea Foundation; Swedish Council for Social Research.
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: Not required.
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