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Fatal flaw in the fetal argument

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2007

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Abstract

Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2006

The fetal-origins hypothesis, in its initial form, postulated that maternal and fetal undernutrition is associated with an increase in an individual's propensity towards the development of CHD and its allied risk factors in adult life (Barker, Reference Barker1993), including hypertension, dyslipidaemia and Type 2 diabetes. Indeed, an inverse association between birth weight and blood pressure has been considered to provide the strongest evidence in support of the fetal origins hypothesis (Robinson, Reference Robinson2001). However, recent systematic reviews of the large number of studies in this area have shown little support for two of the major components of the hypothesis, namely inverse associations between birth weight and blood pressure (Huxley et al. Reference Huxley, Neil and Collins2002) and with dyslipidaemia (Huxley et al. 2004), flaws, which if not fatal, are at the very least problematic, for the fetal-origins hypothesis (Huxley, Reference Huxley2006).

Evidence from animal studies has been used to provide support in favour of the fetal-origins hypothesis, but as Professor Cohen implies, extrapolating these findings to human populations is fraught with difficulty. In humans, there are limited data as to the effects of maternal nutrition on offspring's adult health, but what data there are would tend to suggest that maternal undernutrition is not strongly associated with either higher blood pressure or cholesterol levels in offspring (Stanner et al. Reference Stanner, Bulmer, Andres, Lantseva, Borodina, Poteen and Yudkin1997; Roseboom et al. Reference Roseboom, van-der-Meulen, Ravelli, von Montfrans, Osmond, Barker and Bleker1999).

But, even allowing for a small inverse association between birth weight and CHD risk factors, from a public health perspective, strategies aimed at reducing the burden of chronic disease through the modification of adult lifestyle factors such as cigarette smoking, diet and physical activity are likely to be far more achievable and have a much greater impact than interventions aimed at reducing the burden of disease through increases in birth weight (Huxley et al. Reference Huxley, Neil and Collins2002, Reference Huxley, Owen, Whincup, Cook, Colman and Collins2004).

References

Barker, DJP (1993) Fetal and infant origins of adult disease. BMJ, 1st editionGoogle Scholar
Huxley, R (2006) Invited Commentary: Fatal flaw in the fetal argument. Br J Nutr 95, 441442CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huxley, R, Neil, A & Collins, R (2002) Unravelling the fetal origins hypothesis: is there really an inverse association between birth weight and subsequent blood pressure? Lancet 360, 659665CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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