Reduced fetal growth rate and increased risk of death from ischaemic heart disease: cohort study of 15 000 Swedish men and women born 1915-29
BMJ 1998; 317 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.317.7153.241 (Published 25 July 1998) Cite this as: BMJ 1998;317:241- David A Leon (dleon{at}lshtm.ac.uk), senior lecturera,
- Hans O Lithell, professorb,
- Denny Vågerö, professorc,
- Ilona Koupilová, lecturera,
- Rawya Mohsen, programmerb,
- Lars Berglund, statisticianb,
- Ulla-Britt Lithell, assistant professorb,
- Paul M McKeigue, readera
- aDepartment of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E 7HT
- bInstitute of Geriatrics, University of Uppsala, S-751 25 Uppsala, Sweden
- cDepartment of Sociology, Stockholm University, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
- Correspondence to: Dr Leon
Abstract
Objective: To establish whether fetal growth rate (as distinct from size at birth) is associated with mortality from ischaemic heart disease.
Design: Cohort study based on uniquely detailed obstetric records with 97% follow up over the entire life course and linkage to census data in adult life.
Subjects: All 14 611 babies delivered at the Uppsala Academic Hospital, Sweden, during 1915-29 followed up to end of 1995.
Main outcome measures: Mortality from ischaemic heart disease and other causes.
Results: Cardiovascular disease showed an inverse association with birth weight for both men and women, although this was significant only for men. In men a 1000 g increase in birth weight was associated with a proportional reduction in the rate of ischaemic heart disease of 0.77 (95% confidence interval 0.67 to 0.90). Adjustment for socioeconomic circumstances at birth and in adult life led to slight attenuation of this effect. Relative to the lowest fourth of birth weight for gestational age, mortality from ischaemic heart disease in men in the second, third, and fourth fourths was 0.81 (0.66 to 0.98), 0.63 (0.50 to 0.78), and 0.67 (0.54 to 0.82), respectively. The inclusion of birth weight per se and birth weight for gestational age in the same model strengthened the association with birth weight for gestational age but removed the association with birth weight.
Conclusions: This study provides by far the most persuasive evidence of a real association between size at birth and mortality from ischaemic heart disease in men, which cannot be explained by methodological artefact or socioeconomic confounding. It strongly suggests that it is variation in fetal growth rate rather than size at birth that is aetiologically important.
Key messages
Adult mortality from ischaemic heart disease increases as size at birth declines
This association cannot be explained by artefact including selection bias or socioeconomic confounding
This association cannot be explained by artefact including selection bias or socioeconomic confounding
The relevant determinants of fetal growth rate that drive this association have yet to be identified
Introduction
In 1989 the first of a series of papers was published from a cohort study of men and women born in Hertfordshire in the 1920s and 1930s which suggested that cardiovascular disease, ischaemic heart disease in particular, was inversely associated with birth weight. 1 Since then this association has been confirmed in cohorts studies from a range of countries,3–%7 as reviewed elsewhere.8 Only one study, from Gothenburg, failed to find evidence of an inverse association.9
Selection bias has been a major concern of critics who have questioned the validity of these findings. 1011 In the Hertfordshire study, for example, results are based on the follow up of less than half of all those who made up the original birth cohort. A second concern is that the association between size at birth and mortality in adult life may be due to socioeconomic confounding.10–%12 Reduced size at birth may simply be a marker for poor maternal socioeconomic circumstances that predict relative deprivation of the offspring in adult life, which leads in turn to an increased risk of ischaemic heart disease. Only two previous studies have explicitly examined this issue. 5 6
The quality and completeness of the information on size at birth in previous studies varies and is not optimal in any. Most use historical obstetric records as the source of information on size at birth, although two used self reported birth weights. 5 6 Ponderal index has been analysed in only two studies, both of which found it to be inversely associated with cardiovascular mortality. 37
Only three studies have included data on gestational age, each using it simply to restrict analyses to term births. 367 There has been no systematic attempt to examine whether it is the rate of fetal growth that underlies the association of size at birth with cardiovascular mortality.
We report the results of an almost complete follow up in a cohort of all people born in Uppsala Academic Hospital in 1915-29. It contains within it 600 subjects who were part of the smaller Uppsala study of 50 year old men.13–%16 This new cohort has almost complete data on a wide range of dimensions at birth, gestational age, and maternal characteristics. It contains extensive information on socioeconomic circumstances of adult study members. Because of these unique features our analyses have been able to deal with all of the important shortcomings of previous studies.
Methods
The historical cohort was based on all 14 611 births in Uppsala Academic Hospital in 1915-29. Of these, 6690 were to women resident in the city of Uppsala and 4001 were to women from parishes less than 20 km from Uppsala. The remainder were births to women living further away, many from places with direct rail links to Uppsala. The cohort covers over 75% of all births in 1915-29 to residents of Uppsala city and 50% of all births to residents of parishes <20 km from Uppsala.
Data abstracted
Sequentially numbered obstetric records for each delivery during this period have been kept in bound volumes. Key variables abstracted included maternal parity, age, marital status, date of last menstrual period, birth weight, birth length, placental weight, child's sex, and multiplicity. Complete information on all these variables was available for 96% of subjects. Parental occupation was used to allocate each birth to one of seven social classes,17 plus a residual group for those for whom parental occupation was not stated (3%).
Follow up entailed tracing each subject through the statutory system of parish archives that recorded all births, deaths, and changes in residence. For almost all of those surviving until the early 1950s we found personal identity numbers that were introduced around this time. Information on deaths and emigrations held on computerised data files from this point onwards were linked to study members by using this number.
Underlying cause of death was available from nationally collated and centrally coded computerised data from 1952. These data were coded according to the revision of the international classification of diseases in force at the time of death. To ensure that cause of death categories were relatively homogenous, cause specific analyses were restricted to deaths occurring after the introduction in Sweden of ICD-7 (international classification of diseases, 7th revision) in 1958.
Information on access to cars, marital status, occupation, education, and income was obtained from the 1960 and 1970 censuses. Of those known to be alive on the date of each census, more than 99% were successfully linked. Analyses in which we controlled for these socioeconomic factors were thus restricted to deaths occurring after the 1970 census.
Statistical analysis
We used Cox's proportional hazards model in the STATA statistical package to analyse the mortality data.18 Subjects exited from risk on their date of first emigration, death, or end of follow up (31 December 1995), whichever was soonest. In all models the time dimension was defined as age. Three periods of birth were included (1915-9, 1920-4, and 1925-9). Birth weight (recorded to the nearest 10 g with some heaping at 50 g and 100 g) was classified into four categories with the same cut offs as used in our previous work on blood pressure and birth weight.13 Ponderal index was calculated in units of kg/m3, with birth length recorded to the nearest cm. Gestational age in days was calculated by using date of last menstrual period. Birth weight for gestational age for each subject was defined as a sex specific z score calculated for each week of gestation for the 99% of births with gestations of 30 weeks or more. Z scores were not calculated for births with shorter gestations because of statistical imprecision arising from small numbers. Trend tests for birth weight, birth weight for gestational age, and ponderal index were calculated on the basis of the continuous variables. Significance was defined as P<0.05.
Results
Records were identified for 14 611 deliveries that had occurred from 1915 to 1929 in the Uppsala Academic Hospital, of which 418 were stillbirths. Of the live births, 14 026 were singletons; 382 (2.7%) children could not be traced; and 911 died in their first year of life. Of the total number of traced live singleton births 7012 were male and 6351 female. Among the traced births the perinatal mortality in the cohort was 50 per 1000 live births and stillbirths, and the neonatal and postneonatal rates were 30 and 36 per 1000 live births, respectively. Of the 13 282 subjects surviving to the age of 1 year, by the end of follow up (31 December 1995) 197 had emigrated, 4087 had died, and 8616 were still alive. The perinatal characteristics of the singleton live born traced subjects are shown in table 1 along with the characteristics of those who survived to age 1, 15, and 65 years.
The association of birth weight with mortality at different ages is shown in table 2. The powerful association between low birth weight and infant mortality was evident for both sexes. A more continuous inverse association of mortality across the four birthweight categories was evident in children (ages 1-14 years). No systematic association was apparent at working ages, while at age >=65 years among men there was a suggestion of a reverse J shaped association of birth weight with mortality.
The proportional changes in adult mortality from specific causes of death associated with an increase in birth weight of 1000 g are shown in table 3. Mortality from all neoplasms increased slightly with birth weight, although this was not significant. For all other causes, except respiratory disease, mortality decreased as birth weight increased. The largest proportional effects among men and women were for ischaemic heart disease and cerebrovascular disease, although only ischaemic heart disease among men showed a significant association.
The subjects born to parents in the manual social classes and those born to single mothers had increased rates of infant mortality and reduced size at birth.19 Mortality from ischaemic heart disease showed significant associations (P<0.05) with occupational status at the 1960 census, duration of education and individual earned income at the 1970 census, and household car ownership at the 1960 and 1970 censuses; mortality increased as occupational status, educational level, income, and car ownership declined (not shown). Adjustment for socioeconomic circumstances at birth and in adult life led to only a small reduction in the strength of the association between birth weight and mortality from ischaemic heart disease, which remained significant (table 4.
Birth weight is a function of gestational age at delivery and of fetal growth rate. In our data gestational age itself was not associated with mortality from ischaemic heart disease (not shown). Table 5 shows the strength of the association of mortality from ischaemic heart disease and fetal growth rate (measured as birth weight for gestational age z scores) and compares it with the strength of association with birth weight per se. To make the effects comparable we analysed fourths of birth weight and birth weight for gestational age.
The crude effects of birth weight and birth weight for gestational age were broadly similar, and both were highly significant (table 5).We were able, however, to separate the effect of birth weight per se from that of fetal growth rate by adjusting each for the effect of the other. When we did this, as shown in the final column of table 5, the effect of birth weight on mortality from ischaemic heart disease was almost entirely eliminated, while the effect of birth weight for gestational age was slightly strengthened. We therefore concluded that it is rate of fetal growth that underlies the association of birth weight with mortality from ischaemic heart disease.
Ponderal index (kg/m3) showed a significant inverse association with mortality from ischaemic heart disease in men (P=0.002). Among traced singleton births, the rate ratio relative to those with a ponderal index of <25 was 0.86 (95% confidence interval 0.72 to 1.04), 0.73 (0.59 to 0.90), and 0.76 (0.59 to 1.00) for ponderal index categories of 25.0-26.9, 27.0-28.9, and >=29.0, respectively. After simultaneous adjustment for birth weight for gestational age, however, the effect of ponderal index was much attenuated and no longer significant (P=0.19). The adjusted rate ratios relative to the lowest category of ponderal index were 0.93 (0.77 to 1.13), 0.83 (0.66 to 1.05), and 0.90 (0.68 to 1.20). There was no evidence of any association of placental weight with mortality from ischaemic heart disease (not shown).
Discussion
We have confirmed that among men mortality from ischaemic heart disease declines as birth weight increases. Similar inverse associations were evident among women and for mortality from cerebrovascular disease in both sexes, although these associations were not significant. Other causes of death showed less pronounced inverse or weak positive associations with birth weight.
Strengths of data
A unique strength of our evidence from Uppsala is that we have been able to observe the mortality of members of a well defined cohort from birth to old age. The striking stability of the perinatal characteristics of survivors of the cohort at different ages shows that there has not been any substantial differential loss to the cohort as follow up progressed. The associations we have described cannot thus be explained by some sort of selection bias as has been suggested for studies with less complete follow up. 1011
We have shown clearly that the association of birth weight with mortality varies with age. As would be expected, babies weighing less than 3250 g have particularly high mortality in the first year of life. In childhood, mortality declines progressively across the entire range of birth weight. We have failed to find any other data in the literature from developed countries on this striking association, and we are currently exploring this phenomenon in more detail. In adult life the association of all cause mortality with birth weight is far weaker.
Our data on socioeconomic circumstances come from three points—at birth and at the 1960 and 1970 censuses—and cover many different dimensions of socioeconomic position. With respect to ischaemic heart disease, our results are consistent with those reported from Caerphilly 520 and the United States nurses health study,6 which found that the effect of birth weight on incident coronary disease and myocardial infarction persisted after socioeconomic adjustment. We found a small attenuation of effect after adjustment for socioeconomic circumstances at birth and in adult life, confirming that socioeconomic confounding cannot explain the major part of the association between size at birth and mortality from ischaemic heart disease.
Other studies
Only three other studies have included information on gestational age. In the Sheffield study this was available for only 822 (51%) men,3 while in the United States nurses cohort subjects were asked only whether or not they were born at full term or 2 or more weeks prematurely.6 The Finnish7 and United States nurses cohorts6 both restricted analyses to term births. In contrast, the Uppsala birth cohort study is the first to have complete data on gestational age, which allowed analysis of the effect of growth rate on later mortality as distinct from weight at birth. Our results provide for the first time direct evidence that mortality from ischaemic heart disease is associated fetal growth rate (measured as birth weight for gestational age) rather than with size at birth.
The Sheffield3 and Helsinki7 studies found that ponderal index at birth was inversely associated with risk of ischaemic heart disease. We also found such an inverse association. Our data suggest, however, that this association is largely explained by confounding with birth weight for gestational age as had already been suggested.11 This ties in with the perinatal literature that suggests that disproportionality at birth has limited aetiological importance once the severity of intrauterine growth retardation is taken into account. 2122
The determinants of variation in fetal growth rate are numerous and include factors such as maternal height, weight, parity, and age as well as paternal height.23 How far maternal nutritional status underlies the variations in fetal growth rate observed in our cohort is not possible to assess. In a relatively well nourished population, however, such as our Swedish cohort, maternal nutrition before or during pregnancy is not thought to explain much of the variation in fetal growth rate. 2324
In summary, these data provide the most compelling evidence to date that there is a real association between size at birth and risk of ischaemic heart disease in men that cannot be accounted for by methodological shortcomings or confounding with socioeconomic factors. Most importantly, we have shown for the first time that it is variations in fetal growth rate rather than birth weight or ponderal index that underlie these long term consequences of circumstances in utero.
Acknowledgments
We thank Lena Nyvall and Charlotte Freiman, whose dedication and hard work in tracing and collecting the obstetric data made a central contribution to this study; Neela Shah, who undertook early analyses of the preliminary data; and Professor Gunilla Lindmark for advice on the use of the obstetric records.
Footnotes
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Contributors The planning of analyses and interpretation of the data was the product of discussions involving all authors, all of whom also commented on drafts of the paper. DAL and PMMcK had the original idea for the study and oversaw its conduct together with HOL and DV. The collection of the obstetric data and the tracing through the parish archives was supervised by RM and UBL. Advice on the use of socioeconomic data at birth was provided by UBL. Advice on obtaining and using the census data was provided by DV. RM and LB undertook the construction of the study database and its cleaning and documentation. IK assisted with the development of systematic checks on the quality of the obstetric and cause of death data and its documentation. Background and interim analyses of results were carried out by IK, LB, and RM. Final analyses and drafting of the original and revised manuscripts were undertaken by DAL, who will act as guarantor.
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Funding This work was supported through grants from the UK Medical Research Council (grant No 9322050), the Swedish Council for Social Research (grant No 94/0157), and the Swedish Medical Research Council (grant No 5446). During part of her work on this study IK was in receipt of a Royal Society postdoctoral research fellowship.
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Conflict of interest None