ESPE Abstracts (2014) 82 P-D-1-2-116

ESPE2014 Poster Presentations Fat Metabolism & Obesity (1) (12 abstracts)

Characterizing the Metabolically Obese Normal Weight Phenotype in Youth

Melanie Henderson a , Marie-Eve Mathieu a , Andrea Benedetti c & Tracie Barnett b


aUniversity of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; bConcordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; cMcGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada


Background: Although metabolically obese normal weight (MONW) adults are at increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease (CVD), little is known regarding MONW children.

Objective and hypotheses: To characterize lifestyle habits and insulin dynamics of MONW children.

Method: Caucasian youth (n=630) aged 8–10 years, with at least one obese biological parent, were studied (QUALITY cohort). We defined MONW children as having normal weight and at least one of: triglycerides >1.2 mmol/l, fasting glucose >6.1, HDL-cholesterol <1.04, blood pressure (BP) >95th percentile for age and sex and height, or waist circumference >90th percentile for age and sex (n=53). Fitness was measured by VO2peak, moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) using accelerometry. Sedentary behavior indicators included average hours daily of self-reported screen time (SBST), and average minutes daily at <100 counts/min from accelerometry (SBacc). Insulin sensitivity and secretion were measured with Matsuda-insulin sensitivity index (ISI) and the ratio of the area under the curve of insulin to glucose (AUC I/G 30 min) over the first 30 min of an OGTT respectively. We compared MONW children to normal weight youth with no risk factors (n=182) using t-tests.

Results: No normal weight youth (n=235) met criteria for metabolic syndrome, while 47/235 children had one CVD risk factor, and 6/235 had two risk factors. Children with at least one risk factor (22.6%) vs those without had: i) lower MVPA (57 vs 48 min/day, P=0.03); ii) higher SBST (3.1 vs 2.3 h/day, P=0.006). There were no differences between the groups in terms of age, sex, fitness, SBacc, Matsuda-ISI or AUC I/G 30 min.

Conclusion: Further research is warranted to better understand what characteristics distinguish normal weight youth without CVD risk factors from MONW youth, towards the development of early CVD prevention strategies.

Volume 82

53rd Annual ESPE (ESPE 2014)

Dublin, Ireland
18 Sep 2014 - 20 Sep 2014

European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology 

Browse other volumes

Article tools

My recent searches

No recent searches.