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Optimal weight gain to reduce obesity risk in preterm infants in a National cohort study

Authors
Jeon, Ga WonShin, JaehoHa, Eun KyoKim, Ju HeeKim, Min SeoHan, BoeunLee, SoonchulHan, Man Yong
Issue Date
Jan-2026
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Keywords
Childhood obesity; Preterm infants; Low-birth-weight infants; Weight gain; Growth and development
Citation
Scientific Reports, v.16, no.1
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Scientific Reports
Volume
16
Number
1
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/82411
DOI
10.1038/s41598-025-34404-6
ISSN
2045-2322
Abstract
This study aims to identify the optimal postnatal weight gain through age 6 to prevent obesity in preterm infants. Nested case-control study using a nationwide South Korean cohort (2008-2015) included preterm infants with obesity (cases) and those with BMI between the 5th-85th percentiles (controls) at age 6. Weight-for-age and BMI z-scores were compared using Cohen's d. Logistic regression identified obesity risk factors, and net benefit analysis determined optimal intervention points by birth weight. Among 41,286 preterm infants, 3349 (8.1%) developed obesity. Birth weight z-score differences between cohorts were small (Cohen's d = 0.115), but differences in weight-for-age z-scores emerged at 4-6 months (Cohen's d = 0.474) and grew over time (3 years: Cohen's d = 1.278). Risk factors included low gestational age, high birth weight, rural residence, lower socioeconomic status, and recent birth. Higher z-scores correlated with greater net benefit, with extremely low birth weight infants showing earlier increases. In conclusion, a rapid increase in z-scores from 4 to 6 months was strongly linked to obesity at 6 years. Optimal predictive values varied by birth weight, emphasizing the need for early monitoring and tailored cut-off values for z-scores based on corrected age to prevent obesity.
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