A groundbreaking study has uncovered a compelling link between maternal childhood adversity and early-life weight gain in male offspring, marking a significant advance in understanding intergenerational effects of trauma. The research, conducted by an international team including scientists from Columbia and Duke Universities in the United States and the Federal University of São Paulo (UNIFESP) in Brazil, followed 352 newborn-mother pairs in São Paulo and Guarulhos, Brazil. The findings reveal that adverse experiences faced by mothers during their own childhood — including neglect and physical, psychological, or sexual violence — are associated with unusually rapid weight gain in their male infants within the first two months of life, signaling early metabolic alterations that could elevate the risk for obesity and diabetes later in life.
This study is pioneering in its identification of physical consequences of maternal trauma manifested so early in a child’s development. While prior research has extensively documented psychological and developmental problems linked to maternal childhood adversity, this is the first to show direct physiological impacts observable shortly after birth. Babies in the study were healthy, full-term, and born at expected weights, yet those born to mothers who endured childhood trauma exhibited weight gains exceeding World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations by a notable margin, averaging 35 grams per day versus the advised 30 grams, with some infants gaining as much as 78 grams daily.
Crucially, the effect was sex-specific, observed exclusively in male offspring. The researchers attribute this disparity to differences in placental physiology linked to fetal sex. The placenta, a transient yet vital organ composed of both maternal and fetal tissue, varies structurally and functionally between males and females, including in steroid hormone and protein expression. Male fetuses appear to employ a strategy favoring uninterrupted growth even in adverse intrauterine conditions, potentially predisposing them to increased risks of prematurity and fetal mortality. Conversely, female placentas exhibit adaptive mechanisms that slow growth in response to maternal stress without compromising overall fetal size, thereby enhancing survival odds.
The maternal environment profoundly influences fetal development via hormonal and immunological channels. Maternal childhood adversities elevate the likelihood of prenatal depression and anxiety, linked in turn to heightened inflammatory markers such as pro-inflammatory cytokines and cortisol circulating within the intrauterine milieu. The male fetal placenta is considered more permeable to these stress-related factors, resulting in greater fetal exposure and possibly driving accelerated postnatal weight accrual through disrupted metabolic programming. These distinct placental susceptibilities highlight sex-dependent vulnerabilities currently underexplored in developmental biology and medicine.
Importantly, the researchers diligently controlled for a suite of potential confounding variables, including mothers’ lifetime trauma histories, current stress status, educational background, and socioeconomic factors. They also accounted for infant feeding methods; since 70% of infants were exclusively breastfed and the remainder received mixed feeding without introduction of solid or formula-based calorie-dense foods, nutritional influences on weight gain were minimized. These methodological considerations strengthen the argument that maternal trauma exerts direct biological effects on early infant metabolism, rather than simply reflecting environmental or behavioral confounds.
The accelerating weight gain in male infants linked to maternal childhood adversity raises critical public health concerns, given early rapid weight increases are recognized predictors of childhood obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes later in development. The metabolic alterations suggested by these findings present a potential mechanistic pathway by which maternal experiences transmit health effects transgenerationally, beyond psychosocial consequences. Through epigenetic regulation, immune modulation, and endocrine disruption, maternal trauma may influence critical windows of metabolic plasticity, setting trajectories toward chronic disease.
This work is part of a larger Thematic Project funded by the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) and the United States National Institutes of Health, which leverages a broader database of 580 vulnerable pregnant women to examine intergenerational trauma and health. The ongoing longitudinal study will continue to monitor the growth and metabolic health of the offspring through 24 months of age. This extended follow-up is designed to investigate how the introduction of complementary feeding around six months interacts with these early metabolic changes and whether early-life interventions can modulate adverse outcomes.
The implications of these findings extend into clinical practice and preventive strategies as research increasingly supports the modifiability of metabolic programming in infancy. Professor Andrea Parolin Jackowski, coordinator of the Brazilian arm of the project, emphasizes that early metabolic changes induced by maternal adversity are not deterministic. Clinical monitoring of inflammatory markers and metabolic parameters in at-risk infants may open avenues for targeted nutritional, behavioral, or pharmacologic interventions to mitigate the long-term sequelae of transgenerational trauma exposure.
Additionally, this study reinforces the necessity of integrating maternal mental health care and social support measures into prenatal care frameworks, particularly for populations with increased exposure to childhood adversity, to improve outcomes not only for mothers but also for their descendants. The sex-specific mechanisms elucidated here prompt further research into tailored approaches that consider placental and fetal sex differences in developmental risk and resilience.
From a broader scientific vantage, these findings contribute to an expanding body of evidence on how early life and even preconception conditions shape lifelong health trajectories. The transdisciplinary collaboration uniting clinical, biological, and social science perspectives affirms the complexity of intergenerational health and underscores the vital role of early intervention and prevention.
As the study tracks this vulnerable cohort forward, the research community eagerly awaits insights into the evolution of these early metabolic effects and their amenability to intervention. The ability to identify biomarkers and pathways mediating metabolic programming responsive to maternal history offers a hopeful horizon for disrupting the transmission of obesity and metabolic diseases across generations.
In sum, this investigation profoundly shifts understanding of maternal childhood adversity from a primarily psychological risk factor to a biologically active agent influencing neonatal metabolic health through sex-specific placental mechanisms. It lays groundwork for transformative interventional strategies aiming to break cycles of trauma and disease starting from the earliest phases of life.
Subject of Research: Intergenerational impact of maternal childhood adversity on early infant metabolic outcomes.
Article Title: Sex-specific association between maternal childhood adversities and offspring’s weight gain in a Brazilian cohort.
News Publication Date: 23-Jan-2025.
Web References:
Article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-87078-5
FAPESP project: https://bv.fapesp.br/en/auxilios/106717
Press release: https://agencia.fapesp.br/32577
Tags: childhood neglect and obesity riskearly development and traumaearly-life weight gain in infantsimpact of maternal experiences on childreninfant health and maternal historyintergenerational effects of traumamaternal adversity and child healthmaternal childhood traumametabolic changes in newbornsobesity risk factors in boysphysiological effects of maternal adversitypsychological impacts of maternal trauma