Abstract
Context: Epidemiologic studies have demonstrated that overweight/obese girls (OW/OB) undergo thelarche and menarche earlier than normal weight girls (NW). There have been no longitudinal studies to specifically investigate how body weight/fat affects both clinical and biochemical pubertal markers in girls. Objective: To investigate the effect of total body fat on reproductive hormones and on the maturation of estrogen-sensitive tissues during puberty in girls. Methods: Ninety girls (36 OW/OB, 54 NW), aged 8.2 to 14.7 years, completed 2.8 ± 1.7 study visits over 4 years. Visits included dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry to calculate total body fat (TBF), Tanner staging, breast ultrasound for morphological staging (BMORPH; A-E), pelvic ultrasound, hormone tests, and assessment of menarchal status. The effect of TBF on pubertal markers was determined using a mixed, multistate, or Cox proportional hazards model, controlling for baseline BMORPH. Results: NW were older than OW/OB (11.3 vs 10.2 years, P
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Ortega, M. T., McGrath, J. A., Carlson, L., Poccia, V. F., Larson, G., Douglas, C., … Shaw, N. D. (2021). Longitudinal Investigation of Pubertal Milestones and Hormones as a Function of Body Fat in Girls. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 106(6), 1668–1683. https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgab092
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