Abstract

BackgroundSeveral components of dairy products have been linked to earlier menarche.Methods/FindingsThis study assessed whether positive associations exist between childhood milk consumption and age at menarche or the likelihood of early menarche (<12 yrs) in a U.S sample. Data derive from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2004. Two samples were utilized: 2657 women age 20–49 yrs and 1008 girls age 9–12 yrs. In regression analysis, a weak negative relationship was found between frequency of milk consumption at 5–12 yrs and age at menarche (daily milk intake β = −0.32, P<0.10; “sometimes/variable milk intake” β = −0.38, P<0.06, each compared to intake rarely/never). Cox regression yielded no greater risk of early menarche among those who drank milk “sometimes/varied” or daily vs. never/rarely (HR: 1.20, P<0.42, HR: 1.25, P<0.23, respectively). Among the 9–12 yr olds, Cox regression indicated that neither total dairy kcal, calcium and protein, nor daily milk intake in the past 30 days contributed to early menarche. Girls in the middle tertile of milk intake had a marginally lower risk of early menarche than those in the highest tertile (HR: 0.6, P<0.06). Those in the lowest tertiles of dairy fat intake had a greater risk of early menarche than those in the highest (HR: 1.5, P<0.05, HR: 1.6, P<0.07, lowest and middle tertile, respectively), while those with the lowest calcium intake had a lower risk of early menarche (HR: 0.6, P<0.05) than those in the highest tertile. These relationships remained after adjusting for overweight or overweight and height percentile; both increased the risk of earlier menarche. Blacks were more likely than Whites to reach menarche early (HR: 1.7, P<0.03), but not after controlling for overweight.ConclusionsThere is some evidence that greater milk intake is associated with an increased risk of early menarche, or a lower age at menarche.

Highlights

  • The age at which a female reaches sexual maturity represents a critical transition in her life history

  • There is some evidence that greater milk intake is associated with an increased risk of early menarche, or a lower age at menarche

  • Nutrient intake and storage during childhood may influence the timing of menarche through hormones such as leptin and insulin, and growth factors such as Insulin-like Growth Factor I (IGF-I), all of which are involved in the regulation of growth and maturation [1,14,15]

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Summary

Introduction

The age at which a female reaches sexual maturity represents a critical transition in her life history. There is variation in age at menarche among population groups in the U.S, with African Americans averaging a younger age at menarche than Whites [17,26,27,28], while Mexican-American girls have average ages at menarche between those of Blacks and Whites [28]. This variation is not wellunderstood, but is likely to stem from differences in experiences with the factors just outlined [29]. Several components of dairy products have been linked to earlier menarche

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