Abstract

BackgroundAn estimated 11% of births occur preterm, and survival is improving. Early studies suggested an association between preterm birth and earlier puberty. Given the adverse outcomes associated with early puberty this could have significant public health implications.The objective of this review was to assess the timing of puberty after preterm birth.MethodsPubmed, Embase, Popline, Global Health and Global Health Library were searched using terms relating to “premature birth”, “menarche”, “puberty” and “follow up studies”. Inclusion criteria were a population consisting of pubertal or post-pubertal adolescents and adults; studies which defined preterm delivery in participants and compared outcomes to those after term delivery; and a quantitative assessment of pubertal onset. Assessment of risk of bias was conducted using principles from the Critical Appraisal Study Process.ResultsOur search identified 1051 studies, of which 16 met the inclusion criteria. In females, 8 studies found no association between preterm birth and the timing of menarche. Five studies found earlier onset in preterm infants, 1 found later onset, and 1 showed both earlier and later menarche, depending on birth weight. The range of effect of studies showing earlier menarche was - 0.94 to −0.07 years in the preterm group, with a median of - 0.3 years. In males, 2 studies showed earlier onset of puberty in the preterm group, 5 showed no difference, and 1 showed later onset. Most studies did not present outcomes in the form of a mean with standard deviation, precluding a meta-analysis. There was insufficient data to address potential confounding factors.ConclusionsThe published evidence does not suggest that being born preterm leads to a significant acceleration in the onset of puberty. This should prove reassuring for public health purposes, and for clinicians counseling parents of infants born preterm.

Highlights

  • An estimated 11% of births occur preterm, and survival is improving

  • Preterm birth is common, with an estimated 11% of infants worldwide being born at a gestational age of less than 37 weeks [1]

  • This hypothesis is supported by early data which showed that preterm birth was associated with earlier (6 months) onset of menarche, as compared to term controls [19]

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Summary

Introduction

An estimated 11% of births occur preterm, and survival is improving. Early studies suggested an association between preterm birth and earlier puberty. Given the adverse outcomes associated with early puberty this could have significant public health implications. Survival of preterm infants born even at very early gestations is improving, [2] and these patients are consistently surviving into adolescence and adulthood. This hypothesis is supported by early data which showed that preterm birth was associated with earlier (6 months) onset of menarche, as compared to term controls [19]. Given the morbidity associated with both entities, if there proved to be relationship between the two this would have significant public health consequences This information would be important for clinicians counseling parents and eventually patients on the longer term consequences of preterm birth. We asked the research question: in adolescents (Population), what are the effects of being born prematurely at

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