Exercise Capacity in Young Adults Born Small for Gestational Age.

JAMA Cardiol

Fetal Medicine Research Center, BCNatal-Barcelona Center for Maternal-Fetal and Neonatal Medicine (Hospital Clínic and Hospital Sant Joan de Déu), Institut Clínic de Ginecologia Obstetricia i Neonatologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Centre for Biomedical Research on Rare Diseases (CIBER-ER), Barcelona, Spain.

Published: November 2021

Importance: Being born small for gestational age (SGA), approximately 10% of all births, is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality in adulthood, but mechanistic pathways are unclear. Cardiac remodeling and dysfunction occur in fetuses SGA and children born SGA, but it is uncertain whether and how these changes persist into adulthood.

Objective: To evaluate baseline cardiac function and structure and exercise capacity in young adults born SGA.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This cohort study conducted from January 2015 to January 2018 assessed a perinatal cohort born at a tertiary university hospital in Spain between 1975 and 1995. Participants included 158 randomly selected young adults aged 20 to 40 years born SGA (birth weight below the 10th centile) or with intrauterine growth within standard reference ranges (controls). Participants provided their medical history, filled out questionnaires regarding smoking and physical activity habits, and underwent incremental cardiopulmonary exercise stress testing, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, and a physical examination, with blood pressure, glucose level, and lipid profile data collected.

Exposure: Being born SGA.

Main Outcomes And Measures: Cardiac structure and function assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, including biventricular end-diastolic shape analysis. Exercise capacity assessed by incremental exercise stress testing.

Results: This cohort study included 81 adults born SGA (median age at study, 34.4 years [IQR, 30.8-36.7 years]; 43 women [53%]) and 77 control participants (median age at study, 33.7 years [interquartile range (IQR), 31.0-37.1 years]; 33 women [43%]). All participants were of White race/ethnicity and underwent imaging, whereas 127 participants (80% of the cohort; 66 control participants and 61 adults born SGA) completed the exercise test. Cardiac shape analysis showed minor changes at rest in right ventricular geometry (DeLong test z, 2.2098; P = .02) with preserved cardiac function in individuals born SGA. However, compared with controls, adults born SGA had lower exercise capacity, with decreased maximal workload (mean [SD], 180 [62] W vs 214 [60] W; P = .006) and oxygen consumption (median, 26.0 mL/min/kg [IQR, 21.5-33.5 mL/min/kg vs 29.5 mL/min/kg [IQR, 24.0-36.0 mL/min/kg]; P = .02). Exercise capacity was significantly correlated with left ventricular mass (ρ = 0.7934; P < .001).

Conclusions And Relevance: This cohort of young adults born SGA had markedly reduced exercise capacity. These results support further research to clarify the causes of impaired exercise capacity and the potential association with increased cardiovascular mortality among adults born SGA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8576583PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamacardio.2021.2537DOI Listing

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