
Having breakfast regularly or transitioning from omission to regular consumption appears to improve weight regulation in children and may even prevent weight gain, suggests a study.
A total of 6,528 children (mean age 8.2 years, 48.9 percent male) were assessed in this study. The authors used parent-reported questionnaires to examine the children’s lifestyle behaviours, including breakfast frequency. They measured weight and height and converted these to z-BMI.
Participants were grouped based on trajectories of breakfast consumption habit (ie, regular consumption, irregular consumption, or omission) at baseline and follow-up. The prospective association between breakfast trajectories and z-BMI increase was explored using logistic regression, with adjustments for demographic and lifestyle variables.
Breakfast trajectories had a significant effect on z-BMI both at baseline and follow-up. For instance, children who skipped breakfast had a significant increase in BMI z-score from 0.891 at baseline to 1.072 at follow-up (p<0.05).
Regular eaters, on the other hand, had significantly lower BMI z-score at follow-up compared with both irregular eaters and stable skippers (0.615 vs 1.229; p<0.05).
Notably, stable regular breakfast consumption (odds ratio [OR], 0.55, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.31–0.97; p=0.039) and transition from omission to regular consumption (OR, 0.43, 95 percent CI, 0.21–0.88; p=0.021) independently contributed to a significantly reduced risk of z-BMI gain relative to stable omission.
“Further studies are warranted to extend the evidence on the breakfast habit-BMI association among children,” the authors said.