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Quantifying the impact of early life growth adversity on later life health.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Goldman-Pham, R; Alter, MP; Bao, R; Collins, SÉ; Debban, CL; Allinson, JP; Ambler, A; Bertoni, AG; Caspi, A; Lovinsky-Desir, S; Ekstrom, MP ...
Published in: Communications medicine
November 2025

Early-life growth adversity is important to later-life health, but precision assessment in adulthood is challenging. We evaluated whether the difference between attained and genotype-predicted adult height ("height-GaP") would associate with prospectively ascertained early-life growth adversity and later-life all-cause and cardiovascular mortality.Data were first analyzed from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC; n = 4582; 56/43% female/male) and UKBiobank (n = 483,385; 54/46% female/male). Genotype-predicted height was calculated using a multi-ancestry polygenic height score. Height-GaP was calculated as the difference between measured and genotype-predicted adult height. Early-life growth conditions were ascertained prospectively via standardized procedures (ALSPAC) and mortality via death register (UKBiobank). Regression models examined: (i) adult height-GaP as the outcome with early-life growth conditions as predictors; and (ii) mortality as the outcome with adult height-GaP as predictor. All models were adjusted for age, sex, genotype-predicted height and genetic ancestry. Analyses were replicated in the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study (DMHDS; n = 855; 49/51% female/male) and the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA; n = 6352; 52/48% female/male).Here we show that among ALSPAC participants (median [IQR] age: 24 [18-25] years at height-GaP assessment), lower gestational age at birth, greater pre- and post-natal deprivation indices, tobacco smoke exposure and less breastfeeding are associated with larger adult height-GaP deficit (p < 0.01). Among UKBiobank participants (mean ± SD age: 56 ± 8 years at height-GaP assessment), height-GaP deficit is associated with death from all-causes (adjusted hazard ratio comparing highest-to-lowest height-GaP deficit quartile [aHR]: 1.25 95%CI: 1.21-1.29), atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (aHR: 1.32 95%CI: 1.23-1.42) and coronary heart disease (aHR: 1.64 95%CI: 1.49-1.81). Early- and later-life height-GaP associations replicate in DMHDS and MESA.This study introduces a precision index of early-life growth adversity deployable in adulthood to investigate the developmental origins of longevity and improve health equity across the life course.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Communications medicine

DOI

EISSN

2730-664X

ISSN

2730-664X

Publication Date

November 2025

Volume

5

Issue

1

Start / End Page

534
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Goldman-Pham, R., Alter, M. P., Bao, R., Collins, S. É., Debban, C. L., Allinson, J. P., … Smith, B. M. (2025). Quantifying the impact of early life growth adversity on later life health. Communications Medicine, 5(1), 534. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-025-01245-3
Goldman-Pham, Raphael, Matthew P. Alter, Rebecca Bao, Sophie É. Collins, Catherine L. Debban, James P. Allinson, Antony Ambler, et al. “Quantifying the impact of early life growth adversity on later life health.Communications Medicine 5, no. 1 (November 2025): 534. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-025-01245-3.
Goldman-Pham R, Alter MP, Bao R, Collins SÉ, Debban CL, Allinson JP, et al. Quantifying the impact of early life growth adversity on later life health. Communications medicine. 2025 Nov;5(1):534.
Goldman-Pham, Raphael, et al. “Quantifying the impact of early life growth adversity on later life health.Communications Medicine, vol. 5, no. 1, Nov. 2025, p. 534. Epmc, doi:10.1038/s43856-025-01245-3.
Goldman-Pham R, Alter MP, Bao R, Collins SÉ, Debban CL, Allinson JP, Ambler A, Bertoni AG, Caspi A, Lovinsky-Desir S, Ekstrom MP, Engert JC, Jacobs DR, Malinsky D, Manichaikul A, Michos ED, Moffitt TE, Oelsner EC, Ramrakha S, Rich SS, Sack C, Stanojevic S, Subbarao P, Sugden K, Theodore R, Watson KE, Williams B, Yang B, Dupuis J, Shaheen SO, Barr RG, Hancox RJ, Smith BM. Quantifying the impact of early life growth adversity on later life health. Communications medicine. 2025 Nov;5(1):534.

Published In

Communications medicine

DOI

EISSN

2730-664X

ISSN

2730-664X

Publication Date

November 2025

Volume

5

Issue

1

Start / End Page

534