Association between fetal abdominal growth trajectories, maternal metabolite signatures early in pregnancy, and childhood growth and adiposity: prospective observational multinational INTERBIO-21st fetal study
ContributorsVillar, Jose; Ochieng, Roseline; Gunier, Robert B; Papageorghiou, Aris T; Rauch, Stephen; McGready, Rose; Gauglitz, Julia M![orcid](assets/images/orcid.svg)
; Barros, Fernando C; Vatish, Manu; Fernandes, Michelle; Zammit, Victor; Carrara, Verena Ilona![orcid](assets/images/orcid.svg)
; Munim, Shama; Craik, Rachel; Barsosio, Hellen C![orcid](assets/images/orcid.svg)
; Carvalho, Maria; Berkley, James A; Ismail, Leila I Cheikh; Norris, Shane A; Tshivuila-Matala, Chrystelle O O; Nosten, Francois; Ohuma, Eric O; Stein, Alan; Lambert, Ann; Winsey, Adele; Uauy, Ricardo; Eskenazi, Brenda; Bhutta, Zulfiqar A; Kennedy, Stephen H
Published inThe Lancet. Diabetes & endocrinology, vol. 10, no. 10, p. 710-719
Publication date2022-10
First online date2022-08-26
Abstract
Keywords
- Adiposity
- Female
- Fetal Development / physiology
- Fungicides, Industrial
- Humans
- Kenya
- Oxylipins
- Pediatric Obesity / epidemiology
- Phosphatidylcholines
- Placenta
- Pregnancy
- Prenatal Care
- Prospective Studies
- South Africa
- Ultrasonography, Prenatal
Affiliation entities Not a UNIGE publication
Funding
- Medical Research Council - [MR/V029169/1]
- Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation - [OPP49038]
Citation (ISO format)
VILLAR, Jose et al. Association between fetal abdominal growth trajectories, maternal metabolite signatures early in pregnancy, and childhood growth and adiposity: prospective observational multinational INTERBIO-21st fetal study. In: The Lancet. Diabetes & endocrinology, 2022, vol. 10, n° 10, p. 710–719. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(22)00215-7
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
Secondary files (1)
Identifiers
- PID : unige:176514
- DOI : 10.1016/S2213-8587(22)00215-7
- PMID : 36030799
- PMCID : PMC9622423
Journal ISSN2213-8587