Study objective-To determine the eVects of birth weight and linear growth retardation (stunting) in early childhood on blood pressure at age 11-12 years. Design-Prospective cohort study. Setting-Kingston, Jamaica. Participants-112 stunted children (height for age < −2 SD of the NCHS references) and 189 non-stunted children (height for age > −1 SD), identified at age 9-24 months by a survey of poor neighbourhoods in Kingston. Main results-Current weight was the strongest predictor of systolic blood pressure ( = 4.90 mm Hg/SD weight 95%CI 3.97, 5.83). Birth weight predicted systolic blood pressure ( = −1.28 mm Hg/SD change in birth weight, 95% CI −2.17, −0.38) after adjustment for current weight. There was a significant negative interaction between stunting in early childhood and current weight indicating a larger eVect of increased current weight in children who experienced linear growth retardation in early childhood. There was no interaction between birth weight and current weight. The increase in blood pressure from age 7 to age 11-12 was greater in children with higher weight at age 11-12 and less in children with higher birth weight and weight at age 7. Conclusions-Birth weight predicted systolic blood pressure in Jamaican children aged 11-12. Postnatal growth retardation may potentiate the relation between current weight and blood pressure. Greater weight gain between ages 7 and 11 was associated with a greater increase in systolic blood pressure. The relation between growth and later blood pressure is complex and has prenatal and postnatal components.
Objective: To determine whether nutritional status, anaemia and geohelminth infections were related to school achievement and attendance in Jamaican children. Design: A cross-sectional study using a randomly selected sample. Subjects: Eight hundred children aged 9±13 y randomly selected from those enrolled in grade 5 in 16 primary schools in rural Jamaica. Results: The mean height-for-age of the children was 70.37 z-score AE 1.0 s.d. with 4.9% having heights-for-agè 72 s.d. of the NCHS references. Anaemia (Hb`11 g/dl) was present in 14.7% of the children, 38.3% were infected with Trichuris trichiura and 19.4% with Ascaris lumbricoides. Achievement levels on the Wide Range Achievement Test were low, with children performing at grade 3 level. In multilevel analyses, controlling for socioeconomic status, children with Trichuris infections had lower achievement levels than uninfected children in spelling, reading and arithmetic (P`0.05). Children with Ascaris infections had lower scores in spelling and reading (P`0.05) Height-for-age (P`0.01) was positively associated with performance in arithmetic. Ascaris infection (P`0.001) and anaemia (P`0.01) predicted poorer school attendance. Conclusion: Despite mild levels, undernutrition and geohelminth infections were associated with achievement, suggesting that efforts to increase school achievement levels in developing countries should include strategies to improve the health and nutritional status of children Sponsorship: Funding was provided by the Commonwealth Caribbean Medical Research Council and the InterAmerican Development Bank.
Background: Several classes of anti-cancer agents including certain immunotherapies, systemic chemotherapies, and targeted therapies including trastuzumab and T-DM1 increase the risk of interstitial lung disease (ILD) and fatal cases have been reported. For DS-8201a, interim efficacy and safety analyses of available data established a final recommended dose of 5.4 mg/kg IV q3wk in advanced HER2-positive breast cancer (BC). Based on preliminary clinical results, ILD was identified as an important risk for DS-8201a. A robust monitoring and management plan was established across all studies and an international, independent ILD adjudication committee (AC) reviews the cases reported as ILD on an ongoing basis. Methods: All subjects (sbj) who received ≥1 dose of DS-8201a across 7 ongoing studies were included in this analysis. Reported ILD (standardized MedDRA Query terms) included the terms ILD, pneumonitis, and organizing pneumonia. ILD frequencies were calculated based on investigator's assessment and after adjudication. The analysis of potential risk factors associated with ILD is ongoing. Results: As of 21 June 2018, 448 sbj received ≥1 dose of DS-8201a across multiple tumor types, including BC. Of the 321 sbj with BC, 173 (53.9%) were from Japan, 103 (32.1%) from the US, and 45 (14.0%) from 6 other countries (Spain, South Korea, Taiwan, Belgium, France, and Italy). These sbj received 1 of 7 doses of DS-8201a (0.8 mg/kg: 3 sbjs, 1.6 mg/kg: 1 sbj, 3.2 mg/kg: 3 sbjs, 5.4 mg/kg: 111 sbjs, 6.4 mg/kg: 178 sbj, 7.4 mg/kg: 20 sbj, 8.0 mg/kg: 5 sbj). Overall, 44 cases of potential ILD were reported by the investigators across all tumor types (44/448, 9.8%; Grade ≥3 10/448, 2.2%). In sbj with BC who received 5.4 mg/kg, any grade and Grade ≥3 investigator-reported ILD were 7.2% (8/111) and 0.9% (1/111), respectively. The ILD AC assessed 30 of 44 cases; 22 were considered drug-related ILD, 4 were ILD but not drug-related, and 4 were found not to be ILD. For adjudicated drug-related ILD cases, the median time to onset was 159 (range; 46-591) days from the time of first dose. Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 All Grades All tumors, All doses (N=448) Investigator-reported20 (4.5)14 (3.1)4 (0.9)1 (0.2)5 (1.1)44 (9.8)Cases adjudicated13840530Adjudicated as drug-related ILD9 (2.0)6 (1.3)3 (0.7)04 (0.9)22 (4.9) BC, All doses (N=321) Investigator-reported17 (5.3)11 (3.4)3 (0.9)1 (0.3)4 (1.2)36 (11.2)Cases adjudicated11830426Adjudicated as drug-related ILD8 (2.5)6 (1.9)3 (0.9)04 (1.2)21 (6.5) BC, 5.4 mg/kg (N=111) Investigator-reported4 (3.6)3 (2.7)001 (0.9)8 (7.2)Cases adjudicated120014Adjudicated as drug-related ILD00001 (0.9)1 (0.9)n (%), except where noted Conclusions: These analyses confirm that ILD is an important identified risk for DS-8201a. Further analyses are ongoing to better understand the potential risk factors associated with the incidence of on-treatment ILD. When ILD is suspected, early diagnosis through appropriate imaging, laboratory tests, and pulmonary consultation as well as prompt management with steroids are recommended. Citation Format: Powell CA, Camidge DR, Gemma A, Kusumoto M, Baba T, Kuwano K, Bankier A, Kiura K, Tamura K, Modi S, Tsurutani J, Doi T, Iwata H, Krop IE, Zhang L, Jasmeet S, Saito K, Shahidi J, Yver A, Takahashi S. Characterization, monitoring and management of interstitial lung disease in patients with metastatic breast cancer: Analysis of data available from multiple studies of DS-8201a, a HER2-targeted antibody drug conjugate with a topoisomerase I inhibitor payload [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2018 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2018 Dec 4-8; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(4 Suppl):Abstract nr P6-17-06.
The relationship between physical growth and change in mental development on the Griffiths mental development scales was investigated in 127 stunted Jamaican children over a 2-year period. The role of nutritional supplementation in this relationship was examined. There were no consistent associations between changes in weight-for-height or head circumference and developmental change. Height gain over 2 years was significantly associated with change in mental age, and locomotor and hearing and speech subscale scores. Height gain in the first year predicted change in mental age, and hearing and speech in the second year. Some of the effect of supplementation on development was shared with linear growth. Therefore, nutrition probably explains part of the relationship between growth and development. However, supplementation also had effects on development independent of growth. The benefits of supplementation on development and the extent to which they were shared with growth varied among the subscales.
Aim: To determine whether fasting serum concentrations of glucose, cholesterol and triglyceride at age 11–12 y (a) differed between children stunted in early childhood and those who were never stunted, (b) were related to birthweight or current anthropometry and (c) were related to stunting after controlling for current size. Methods: Anthropometry, serum glucose and lipid concentrations were measured in 112 children stunted in early childhood and 181 non‐stunted children. Results: Children who were stunted in infancy remained shorter, weighed less and were significantly less fat than non‐stunted children but had a more central distribution of fat. They were also less likely to have entered puberty. Non‐stunted children had higher fasting serum triglyceride concentrations than stunted children (p > 0.05). There were no significant correlations between birthweight and fasting glucose or any measure of serum lipids. The percentage of variance in biochemical measures explained by anthropometry was low: between 2.1 for HDL cholesterol and 14.6 for triglyceride. Nutritional status in early childhood (stunted or non‐stunted) made no additional contribution to the variance. Conclusions: Linear growth retardation in early childhood was not independently related to fasting serum concentrations of glucose, cholesterol and triglyceride at age 11–12 y. However, despite being thinner, stunted children had a more central distribution of fat.
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