Title: THE BARKER HYPOTHESIS: FETAL ORIGINS OR MATERNAL ORIGINS
1THE BARKER HYPOTHESIS FETAL ORIGINS OR MATERNAL
ORIGINS?
- Nigel Paneth MD MPH
- Departments of Epidemiology and
- Pediatrics Human Development
- Michigan State University
- Hot Topics Symposium
- Washington, DC
- December 6, 2005
- http//www.epi.msu.edu/faculty/paneth.htm
2PART 1 OF TALK
- DIFFICULTIES WITH THE FETAL ORIGINS HYPOTHESIS
3CONCERNS RAISED ABOUT THE BARKER HYPOTHESIS
- Hypothesis is moving target
- Conflict of hypothesis with population data
- Famine studies by and large unsupportive
- Interventions to raise birthweight not generally
successful - Failure to address confounding
- Multiple and selective comparisons
- Weak and inconsistent effects
- Inappropriate adjustments
4KEY CRITICAL PAPERS
- Elford J, Whincup P, Shaper AG Int J Epidemiol
1991 20833-844 and J Epidemiol and Comm Health
1992 461-8 - Joseph KS, Kramer M Epidemiol Reviews
- Paneth N, Ahmed F, Stein AD J Hypertension
199614 (suppl) S121-129 - Huxley R, Neil A. Collins R Lancet
2002360659-665 - Huxley R, Owen CG, Whincup P et al JAMA 2004
2922755-64 - Tu, Y-K, West R, Ellison GTH et al Am J
Epidemiol 2005 161 27-32
5PART 2 OF TALK
- IS THERE ANOTHER WAY IN WHICH FETAL LIFE MAY BE
LINKED WITH CARDIOVASCULAR RISK FACTORS?
6CORE OF THE ARGUMENT
- Human population groups show different patterns
of perinatal phenomena, including different
birthweight distributions and different pregnancy
complications. - Population groups also show different patterns of
CVD risk factors - These two patterns may be linked
- The perinatal experience may indicate the
historic adversity the population group had to
overcome in order to successfully reproduce. - The cardiovascular risks may be the price paid
for the genetic adaptations that helped mothers
and babies survive
7THE MEXICAN-AMERICAN PERINATAL PARADOX
-
- Even under adverse socio-economic circumstances,
Mexican-Americans have relatively large babies
who experience relatively low neonatal mortality
rates.
8 US INFANT MORTALITY RATE IN HISPANICS,
NON-HISPANIC WHITES AND MEXICAN-AMERICANS (2002)
Per 1,000 live births
9 PERCENT LOW BIRTHWEIGHT (lt 2,500g) BY ETHNICITY
(US 2002)
Per 100 live births
10METABOLIC SYNDROME
- Obesity, especially abdominal obesity
- Dyslipidemia (elevated triglycerides, high LDL
cholesterol and low HDL cholesterol) - Insulin resistance/glucose intolerance
- Elevated blood pressure
11PREGNANCY NUTRITIONAL ADAPTATIONS
- Fat deposition, especially central fat
- Elevation in lipid fractions, especially
triglycerides - Increased insulin secretion and increased insulin
resistance - Propensity to diabetes
12THE METABOLIC SYNDROME IN MESO-AMERICAN
POPULATIONS
- Most Meso-American populations are at high risk
of the first three components of the metabolic
syndrome abdominal obesity, dyslipidemia and
insulin resistance. 50 of Pima Indians have
type II diabetes by the age of 50 - The key pregnancy complication in Meso-American
populations is gestational diabetes - However, Meso-Americans are not at especially
high risk of the fourth component, hypertension
13THE METABOLIC SYNDROME IN MESO-AMERICANS
PARALLELS PREGNANCY ADAPATIONS TO INCREASE FETAL
NUTRITION
14FAT OR PSEUDOPREGNANT?
- The metabolic syndrome is a partial replication
of the pregnant state - It seems likely that the genes that predispose us
to the non-hypertension parts of the metabolic
syndrome arose as adaptations to prioritize fetal
nutrition - The metabolic syndrome may be the price we pay
for large babies with high survival potential,
seen in an extreme form in Meso-American
populations -
-
15THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN PERINATAL SITUATION
- African-Americans babies tend to have the
following characteristics - Relatively high neonatal mortality
- Lower mean birthweight, and higher frequency of
low birthweight. - Lower mean gestational age, and higher frequency
of preterm delivery - Relatively favorable neonatal survival for a
given birthweight or gestational age below the
mean. - Relatively unfavorable neonatal survival for
birthweights and gestational ages above the mean - Relatively high risks of pre-eclampsia
16CARDIOVASCULAR RISK IN AFRICAN-AMERICANS
- Unlike Meso-Americans, the most distinctive
cardiovascular risk factor in African-Americans
is hypertension - Insulin resistance and abdominal obesity occur,
but less commonly than in Meso-Americans - Dyslipidemia is less severe BMI-adjusted HDL-C
levels are actually higher in African-Americans
than in whites
17CAN THE PERINATAL AND CARDIOVASCULAR PATTERNS OF
AFRICAN-AMERICANS BE LINKED?
18DELIVERY HEMORRHAGE
- In underdeveloped countries, bleeding is the
leading cause of maternal death. - Even in the US, 5 of mothers lose more than a
liter of blood in delivery. (Magann EF et al
South Med J. 2005 98419-22) - Delivery bleeding is the most important
hemorrhagic stress ordinarily encountered by
humans. - It is likely that adaptations to prevent
hemorrhage in labor may be important determinants
of genes controlling vasoconstriction and
thrombosis -
19PREGNANCY ADAPTATIONS DESIGNED TO REDUCE RISK OF
DELIVERY BLEEDING
- Dominance of pro-coagulant state
- ? thrombin, PAI, thromboxane, factors VII, VIII,
X - Thromboxane/prostacyclin balance favors
vasoconstriction - Greatly enhanced risk of thrombotic disorders in
pregnancy
20PRE-ECLAMPSIA AS PROTECTION AGAINST DELIVERY
BLEEDING?
- Pre-eclampsia may be an exaggerated version of
ordinary pregnancy adaptions to reduce the risk
of delivery bleeding. - In pre-eclampsia, the mother seems to be trying
to prevent the baby from so remodeling the
uterine vasculature that she risks dying in labor
from bleeding.
21PREGNANCY ADAPTATIONS IN AFRICAN-AMERICANS
- Higher rates of pre-eclampsia, indicating a
tendency towards vasoconstriction - Shorter mean gestation and slower fetal growth
will also produce less delivery bleeding - A predisposition to early delivery may also
protect the mother from experiencing full-blown
eclampsia
22WHY SHOULD PEOPLE OF WEST AFRICAN ORIGIN NEED
SPECIAL PROTECTION FROM DELIVERY BLEEDING?
- Possibly because of a high prevalence of anemia
in pregnancy due to malaria infection. - Malaria is known to have altered the gene pool to
produce the sickle-cell trait - Delivery bleeding is likely to especially
threaten maternal survival in anemic women.
23SAVING MOTHER OR SAVING BABY?
- For each set of genes that have evolved
because of perinatal pressures, one must consider
whether they are designed for optimal fetal or
for optimal maternal survival, which may be in
competition. - In Meso-Americans, genes seem to be favored that
protect the fetus, by transferring nutrients and
producing big babies. The price paid is diabetes
and obesity. - In African-Americans, genes seem to be favored
that protect the mother, by producing a smaller,
less mature baby, and a tendency to
pre-eclampsia. The price paid is hypertension and
somewhat lower neonatal survival. - These two populations are best seen as
illustrating processes that are universal and
found to some degree in all populations.
24IMPLICATIONS FOR CARE AND PREVENTION
- This hypothesis is only designed to understand
how population predispositions to different
components of the cardiovascular risk profile may
have developed as a result of perinatal survival
pressures. - It does not minimize in any way our continuing
public health need to find environmental ways to
prevent and ameliorate the human consequences of
our shared evolutionary history, particularly in
populations at risk.
25APOLOGIA
- I have thought it better to publish my
inquiry in its present imperfect state, than to
wait till I should be able to make such a
complete research as I could wish, more
especially as, by directing the attention of the
profession to the question, it may be earlier
decided. - John Snow On the Adulteration of Bread as a
Cause of Rickets. Lancet 1857ii4-5
26PERINATAL EPIDEMIOLOGY TRAINING PROGRAM AT MSU
(T-32)
- Two NIH-supported post-doctoral positions
available for US citizens/green card holders as
of June 1, 2006 - If interested, contact me at paneth_at_msu.edu
- 517-353-8623, x 112