Background: Little is known about the relationship between early life body size and occurrence of life-course multiple chronic diseases (multimorbidity). We aim to evaluate associations of birth weight, childhood body size, and their changes with the risks of chronic diseases and multimorbidity.Methods: This prospective cohort study included 246,495 UK Biobank participants (aged 40–69 years) who reported birth weight and childhood body size at 10 years old. Birth weight was categorized into low, normal, and high; childhood body size was reported as being thinner, average, or plumper. Multimorbidity was defined as having two or more of 38 chronic conditions retrieved from inpatient hospital data until 31 December, 2020. The Cox regression and quasi-Poisson mixed effects models were used to estimate the associations.Results: We show that 57,071 (23.2%) participants develop multimorbidity. Low birth weight (hazard ratio [HR] 1.29, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.26–1.33), high birth weight (HR 1.02, 95% CI > 1.00–1.05), thinner (HR 1.21, 95% CI 1.18–1.23) and plumper body size (HR 1.06, 95% CI 1.04–1.09) are associated with higher risks of multimorbidity. A U-shaped relationship between birth weight and multimorbidity is observed. Changing to be thinner or plumper is associated with multimorbidity and many conditions, compared to changing to be average.Conclusions: Low birth weight, being thinner and changing to have a thinner body size in childhood are associated with higher risks of developing multimorbidity and many chronic conditions in adulthood. Early monitoring and maintaining a normal body size in childhood could have life-course benefits for preventing multimorbidity above and beyond individual conditions.
Plain language summary: Little is known about the relationship between childhood body size and the risk of developing more than one chronic disease later in life. Using data from the UK, we found that low birth weight, high birth weight, and being thinner or plumper than average during childhood were all associated with higher risks of developing more than one chronic disease in adulthood. In addition, changing body shape during childhood to be either thinner or plumper, was associated with being more likely to develop more than one chronic disease later in life. Our results highlight the importance of early monitoring and maintenance of average body size in childhood, as this might prevent the occurrence of chronic diseases later in life.
Zhang, Zhou et al. correlate birth weight and childhood body size with later development of chronic diseases and multimorbidity. Using data from the UK Biobank they show low or high birth weight and a body size in childhood that differs from the average associate with higher risks of developing multimorbidity and many chronic conditions in late life.