Kawasaki Disease in Infancy and Long-Term Body Mass Index Trajectories

Scritto il 04/01/2026
da Yasutaka Kuniyoshi

J Pediatr Health Care. 2026 Jan 3:S0891-5245(25)00391-8. doi: 10.1016/j.pedhc.2025.11.021. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Kawasaki disease (KD) is associated with long-term cardiovascular risks, raising concerns about future obesity. However, robust longitudinal data on body mass index (BMI) are lacking. This study investigated long-term BMI trajectories from childhood to early adolescence in children with a history of KD.

METHOD: We conducted a secondary analysis of 19,642 children from a nationwide Japanese birth cohort, followed for 13 years. The exposure was parent-reported hospitalization for KD between 6 and 18 months of age. The outcome was membership in distinct BMI z-score trajectory groups identified using group-based multivariate trajectory modeling.

RESULTS: Three distinct BMI z-score trajectories were identified ("Stable," "High-Decreasing," and "Low-Increasing"). After multivariable adjustment, a history of KD was not associated with membership in any trajectory group for either males or females.

CONCLUSIONS: A history of KD in infancy was not associated with alterations in long-term BMI trajectories through early adolescence.

PMID:41485136 | DOI:10.1016/j.pedhc.2025.11.021