Burden and Trend of Macrosomia and Large-for-Gestational-Age Neonates Attributable to High Pre-Pregnancy Body Mass Index in China, 2013–2017: A Population-Based Retrospective Cohort Study

Author:

Zeng Shuai1,Yang Ying234,Han Chunying1,Mu Rongwei1,Deng Yuzhi24,Lv Xinyi24,Xie Wenlu1,Huang Jiaxin1,Wu Siyu1,Zhang Ya2,Zhang Hongguang2,He Yuan2,Peng Zuoqi2,Wang Yuanyuan2,Shen Haiping5,Wang Qiaomei5,Zhang Yiping5,Yan Donghai5,Wang Long1,Ma Xu234

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Epidemiology and Statistics, School of Public Health, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China

2. National Research Institute for Family Planning, Beijing 100081, China

3. National Human Genetic Resources Centre, Beijing 100035, China

4. Graduate School of Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100730, China

5. Department of Maternal and Child Health, National Health Commission of the PRC, Beijing 100044, China

Abstract

Background: The world is transitioning to an obese future, but few studies have measured the burden of increased maternal body mass index (BMI) on pathological fetal overgrowth, especially the trends in this burden and its heterogeneity in populations with different characteristics. Methods: A population-based retrospective cohort study was conducted with 7,998,620 Chinese females who had participated in the National Free Pre-Pregnancy Check-ups Project and became pregnant during 2013–2017. The proportions of macrosomic and LGA neonates attributable to high BMI (population attributable fraction, PAF) and annual percent change of yearly PAFs were estimated. Results: We found that the burden of macrosomic and LGA (large-for-gestational-age) neonates attributable to high pre-pregnancy BMI increased among Chinese females with planned pregnancies during 2013–2017. The PAF of macrosomia attributable to high BMI increased from 3.16% (95% confidence interval: 2.97–3.35%) to 7.11% (6.79–7.42%) by 23.60% (16.76–30.85%) annually, and the PAF of LGA increased from 2.35% (2.21–2.48%) to 5.00% (4.79–5.21%) by 21.98% (16.14–28.11%) annually. Our study identified that participants with disadvantaged socioeconomic status (including those without higher education, living in provinces with GDP per capita < 40,000 CNY, tier IV, and tier V cities) and residing in northern and southwestern China were at high risk of a rapidly expanding burden. Conclusions: Government authorities should control pre-pregnancy BMI through nationwide intervention programs and direct more resources to focus on the unfair burden on females with disadvantaged socioeconomic status.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Excellent Graduate student “Innovation Star” project of education department of Gansu province

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

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1. Effects of prepregnancy dietary patterns on infant birth weight: a prospective cohort study;The Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine;2023-10-30

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