The effect of overweight/obesity on diastolic function in children and adolescents: A meta-analysis
Citation
Samuel Burden, Benjamin Weedon, Luke Whaymand, Josefien Rademaker, Helen Dawes, Alexander Jones. The effect of overweight/obesity on diastolic function in children and adolescents: A meta-analysis. Clinical Obesity. 2021;e12476.
Abstract
Left ventricular diastolic function (LVDF) is an important marker of early cardiovascular
remodelling, which has not been well summarized in young people with overweight/
obesity. Weighted, random-effects regression was used to determine the strength of
associations of both body mass index (BMI) and homeostatic model assessment of
insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) with LVDF measures, adjusting for age and sex. Six databases were searched after PROSPERO registration (CRD42020177470) from inception
to July 2020 for studies that compared LVDF between overweight/obesity and control
groups aged ≤24 years, yielding 70 studies (9983 individuals). Quality and risk of bias
were assessed using NHLBI tools, with scores of good, fair, and poor for 6, 48, and
16 studies, respectively. Increased BMI was associated with worse LVDF in all measures except early mitral inflow deceleration time, with septal early diastolic tissue peak
velocity to late diastolic tissue peak velocity ratio having the strongest association
(n = 13 studies, 1824 individuals; r = 0.69; P < 0.001). Elevated HOMA-IR was also
associated with worse LVDF. Although we could not determine the causality of
reduced LVDF in young people, our findings should aid the development of paediatric
guidelines for the assessment of LVDF and support further work to address the longitudinal consequences of childhood obesity and IR on LVDF