Sciences Po, department of economics, Paris, 75007, France.
Université Paris-Saclay, INRAE, UR ALISS, Ivry-sur-Seine, 94205, France.
Sci Rep. 2020 Apr 1;10(1):5741. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-62576-w.
The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) framework suggests that early-life experiences affect long-term health outcomes. We tested this hypothesis by estimating the long-run effects of exposure to World War II-related food deprivation during childhood and adolescence on the risk of suffering from hypertension and type 2 diabetes at adulthood for 90,226 women from the French prospective cohort study E3N. We found that the experience of food deprivation during early-life was associated with a higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes (+0.7%, 95% CI: 0.073-1.37%) and hypertension (+2.6%, 95% CI: 0.81-4.45%). Effects were stronger for individuals exposed at younger ages. Exposed individuals also achieved lower levels of education, slept less, and were more frequently smokers than unexposed individuals. These results are compatible with both the latency and the pathway models proposed in the DOHaD framework which theorise the association between early life exposure and adult health through both a direct link and an indirect link where changes in health determinants mediate health outcomes.
健康与疾病的发育起源(DOHaD)框架表明,早期生活经历会影响长期健康结果。我们通过估计童年和青少年时期经历二战相关食物匮乏对 90226 名法国前瞻性队列研究 E3N 女性成年后患高血压和 2 型糖尿病风险的长期影响来验证这一假设。我们发现,早期生活中的食物匮乏经历与 2 型糖尿病(+0.7%,95%CI:0.073-1.37%)和高血压(+2.6%,95%CI:0.81-4.45%)的发病风险增加有关。在年龄较小的个体中,暴露的影响更强。暴露个体的教育水平也较低,睡眠时间较少,吸烟频率也高于未暴露个体。这些结果与 DOHaD 框架中提出的潜伏期和途径模型是一致的,该模型通过直接和间接联系来解释早期生活暴露与成人健康之间的关联,其中健康决定因素的变化介导健康结果。