Summary: Authors
examine the predictive relation between childhood-diagnosed ADHD and
trajectories of body mass index (BMI) from childhood to adulthood in an
all-female sample, accounting for socioeconomic status (SES), childhood
comorbidities (e.g., depression/anxiety), and stimulant usage. Childhood
executive functioning (i.e., planning, sustained attention, and response
inhibition) was also evaluated as a possible predictor of BMI trajectories.
Authors
utilized longitudinal data from a full sample of 140 girls diagnosed with ADHD
in childhood and 88 comparison girls matched on age and ethnicity. Girls were
6–12 years old at the first assessment and followed prospectively for
16 years. Data were collected on their BMI and stimulant medication usage
across four evaluation waves. Using latent growth curve modeling, authors evaluated
the BMI trajectories of girls with ADHD and the comparison sample from
childhood to adulthood.
Findings: Although
there was no significant difference in initial childhood BMI, girls with ADHD
increased in BMI at a significantly faster rate than comparison girls across
development, even when adjusting for covariates. Significant differences in BMI
first emerged in adolescence; by adulthood, 40.2% of the ADHD sample met
criteria for obesity versus 15.4% of the comparison sample. When covarying ADHD
diagnosis, executive functioning measures were not significantly predictive of
BMI increase. Adjusting for stimulant medication usage within the ADHD sample
did not alter core findings.
Authors
discuss health-related implications for girls with ADHD, potential underlying
mechanisms, and how their findings may inform both ADHD and obesity
interventions.
This study uses
2001–2012
California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) data.