Study Links Birth Length and Maternal BMI to Atopic Dermatitis Risk in Children

April 13, 2026
Study Links Birth Length and Maternal BMI to Atopic Dermatitis Risk in Children
  • Early data show that greater birth length is linked to higher odds of atopic dermatitis by age three, while shorter birth length lowers that risk.

  • By age three, about a quarter of children in the study had atopic dermatitis (525 of 2,107), and the risk rises with each unit increase in maternal BMI.

  • A study in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: Global found that higher prepregnancy BMI in mothers and longer birth length are independently associated with increased risk of offspring developing atopic dermatitis by age three.

  • Limitations include a predominantly Scandinavian cohort, small numbers in extreme anthropometric subgroups, and potential measurement error from using both ultrasound-estimated fetal weight and measured birth weight.

  • Funding and disclosures: study supported by regional and national health bodies and research councils in Norway; authors reported no conflicts of interest; article prepared with AI tools and reviewed by human editors.

  • Measurement methods involved ultrasonography to assess fetal thoracic and abdominal circumferences mid-pregnancy and at birth, along with birth weight and length to gauge fetal growth and birth metrics.

  • Findings highlight the potential importance of maternal health and fetal growth trajectories for tailoring early childhood allergy risk assessment.

  • The analysis used 2,107 mother–child pairs from the Scandinavian PreventADALL cohort, with maternal prepregnancy BMI assessed at midpregnancy enrollment.

  • Study design: exploratory analysis of the PreventADALL cohort, including up to 2,107 participants for BMI analyses and 1,590–2,035 for various newborn measurements; infants born after 35 weeks gestation without serious illnesses.

  • Short birth length (<48 cm) was inversely related to risk (adjusted odds ratio 0.71; 95% CI 0.51–1.00).

  • Birth weight and other birth measurements such as thoracic or abdominal circumference did not show significant associations with atopic dermatitis by age three.

  • Overall interpretation: early-life growth patterns—encompassing prenatal and perinatal factors—may influence the development of atopic dermatitis in offspring.

Summary based on 2 sources


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