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Volume 8

Journal of Obesity & Weight Loss Therapy

ISSN: 2165-7904

Childhood Obesity 2018

March 15-16, 2018

March 15-16, 2018 | Barcelona, Spain

11

th

International Conference on

Childhood Obesity and Nutrition

An investigation of causal relationshipbetween age at introduction of formula feeding or solids and incidence

of childhood overweightness or obesity in Greater Western Sydney Australia: A prospective cohort study

Haider Mannan

1

and

Praween Senanayake

2

1

Translational Health Research Institute-Western Sydney University, Australia

2

Western Sydney University, Australia

Background:

Epidemiological evidence suggests that timing of introduction of formula-feeding or solid foods may be

associated with subsequent overweight or obesity, and the association may vary by any breastfeeding at first year for four

months or more versus not.

Methods:

We included 346 infants from South Western Sydney using the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC)

who at baseline examination were singleton births, neither overweight nor obese (weight for age<97.7

th

percentile), and were

full term births (gestational age>39 weeks). The primary outcome was time to the occurrence of first overweight or obesity at

ages 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 of the child. Risk of overweight or obesity was defined as body mass index (BMI)≥85

th

percentile, using

the National Centre for Health Statistics curves. The primary exposure variable of interest was age at introduction to formula

or solid foods (<4, and ≥4 months). Missing data were estimated using multivariate normal imputation (MVNI) based on 25

imputations. We used Cox proportional hazards regression to assess the temporal association between age at introduction to

formula or solids and the timing of occurrence of incident overweight or obesity at ages 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 of the child and test

whether the association between age at introduction to formula or solids and timing of occurrence of incident overweight or

obesity was modified by any breastfeeding at first year (≥4 months versus not); with and without adjusting for mother’s BMI,

age, education during pregnancy, race and social disadvantage (SEIFA).

Results:

The risk of overweight or obesity was significantly higher among infants introduced to formula or solids at <4 months

compared to those introduced at ≥4 months in both unadjusted and adjusted analyses. We found strong interaction between

age at formula or solids introduction and breastfeeding for four or more months and subsequent risk of incident overweight or

obesity. The risk of overweight or obesity by age at formula or solids introduction decreased with increase in any breastfeeding

duration to four or more months.

Conclusions:

Timing of introduction to formula or solids within four months was a risk factor of incident childhood overweight

or obesity for children 10 years later; so increasing the prevalence of exclusive breast-feeding to more than four months would

be a worthwhile public health measure. Increasing any breastfeeding duration to at least four months would help to further

decrease the risk of childhood overweight or obesity.

Biography

Haider Mannan is a Biostatistician and Epidemiologist having subject knowledge of comorbid obesity and eating disorders among Australian adults as well as

obesity as a risk factor of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and disability. He has been developing research track record in the broad area of obesity research with

his recent interest and focus been on eating disorders among obese adults in the South Australian population. He has published his papers in some top ranked

obesity and epidemiology journals which include

International Journal of Obesity, American Journal of Epidemiology, Obesity and Annals of Epidemiology.

h.mannan@westernsydney.edu.au

Haider Mannan et al., J Obes Weight Loss Ther 2018, Volume 8

DOI: 10.4172/2165-7904-C1-057