Aims/hypothesis: Our objective was to examine whether longer duration of breast-feeding and later introduction of complementary foods are associated with lower glucose concentrations and insulin resistance (IR-HOMA) in Indian children.
Methods: Breast-feeding duration (six categories from <3 to ≥18 months) and age at introduction of complementary foods (four categories from <4 to ≥6 months) were recorded at 1, 2 and 3 year follow-up of 568 children from a birth cohort in Mysore, India. At 5 and 9.5 years of age, 518 children were assessed for glucose tolerance and IR-HOMA.
Results: All the children were initially breast-fed; 90% were breast-fed for ≥6 months and 56.7% started complementary foods at or before the age of 4 months. Each category increase in breast-feeding duration was associated with lower fasting insulin concentration (β = -0.05 pmol/l [95% CI -0.10, -0.004]; p = 0.03) and IR-HOMA (β = -0.05 [95% CI -0.10, -0.001]; p = 0.046) at 5 years, adjusted for the child's sex, age, current BMI, socioeconomic status, parent's education, rural/urban residence, birthweight and maternal gestational diabetes status. Longer duration of breastfeeding was associated with higher 120-min glucose concentration at 5 years (β = 0.08 mmol/l [95% CI 0.001, 0.15; p = 0.03]) but lower 120-min glucose concentration at 9.5 years (β = -0.09 [95% CI -0.16, -0.03]; p = 0.006). Age at starting complementary foods was unrelated to the children's glucose tolerance and IR-HOMA.
Conclusions/interpretation: Within this cohort, in which prolonged breast-feeding was the norm, there was evidence of a protective effect of longer duration of breast-feeding against glucose intolerance at 9.5 years. At 5 years longer duration of breast-feeding was associated with lower IR-HOMA.