Adverse Childhood Experiences and Weight Loss in Overweight and Obese Children in a 9-Year Study: A Prospective Cohort Study with Structural Equation Modeling

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Abstract

Background

Exposure to adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) is associated with a 30 to 50% increased risk of obesity in adolescence. The role of ACEs as a determinant of weight loss among overweight and obese children remains unclear.

Methods

Among 8568 nine-year-old children randomly sampled in 2007/2008 for the Growing up in Ireland cohort, 2210 were overweight or obese at 9 years and provided complete follow-up data at age 13 and 18 years. Structural equation and natural effects mediation models tested for a direct causal relationship between ACEs before 9 years and remission risk at 18 years, and indirect effects mediated via daily activity, diet quality, self-image and behavioural difficulties and BMI at 9 years.

Results

Among the 1676 adolescents that were overweight or obese at age 9, 46% achieved healthy weight status by age 18; 56% (n=618) of overweight children and 27% (n=153) of obese children), 13% experienced an ACE, and 41% were female. Exposure to an ACE was associated with a higher BMI Z at ages 9 (0.47 vs 0.36, p < 0.05) and 13 years (0.39 vs 0.29, p < 0.05) and reduced the odds of achieving healthy weight status at age 18 by 27% (OR: 0.73, 95% CI:0.54- 0.99). Overweight and obese children exposed to an ACE had lower household income, higher behavioural difficulties, and lower self-concept at ages 9, 13 and 18. Children exposed to an ACE were also 2 to 3-fold more likely to have started smoking before 12 years old and 50% more likely to smoke more than 10 cigarettes a week regularly vape. Behavioural difficulties, self-concept and baseline weight status, but not smoking or dietary habits, mediated the association between ACE exposure and achieving healthy weight at age 18.

Conclusion

Among overweight and obese children, exposure to ACEs indirectly reduces the likelihood of achieving healthy weight status at age 18, mediated by its effects on weight in childhood, and behavioural difficulties and self-concept in mid-adolescence. These findings highlight the complex factors that influence weight loss among overweight and obese children exposed to adverse experiences early in life.

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