Gestational body weight gain and risk of low birth weight or macrosomia in women of Japan: a nationwide cohort study
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Published:2021-09-01
Issue:12
Volume:45
Page:2666-2674
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ISSN:0307-0565
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Container-title:International Journal of Obesity
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Int J Obes
Author:
Uchinuma Hiroyuki, Tsuchiya KyoichiroORCID, Sekine Tetsuo, Horiuchi Sayaka, Kushima Megumi, Otawa Sanae, Yokomichi HiroshiORCID, Miyake Kunio, Akiyama Yuka, Ooka Tadao, Kojima Reiji, Shinohara Ryoji, Hirata Shuji, Yamagata Zentaro, Kamijima Michihiro, Yamazaki Shin, Ohya Yukihiro, Kishi Reiko, Yaegashi Nobuo, Hashimoto Koichi, Mori Chisato, Ito Shuichi, Yamagata Zentaro, Inadera Hidekuni, Nsakayama Takeo, Iso Hiroyasu, Shima Masayuki, Kurozawa Youichi, Suganuma Narufumi, Kusuhara Koichi, Katoh Takahiko,
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
Both maternal prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) and gestational weight gain (GWG) influence maternal and pediatric outcomes. We sought to clarify the impact of prepregnancy BMI-specific GWG and its patterns on the risk of low birth weight (LBW) or macrosomia using data from a large nationwide study in Japan.
Methods
This cohort study (n = 98,052) used data from the Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS). The outcome variables in this study were LBW and macrosomia. We stratified the subjects into groups according to prepregnancy BMI.
Results
GWG from pre-pregnancy to the first trimester had a small effect on the risk of LBW and macrosomia. From the first to second trimesters, insufficient GWG was associated with the risk of LBW, and from the second trimester to delivery, a GWG of less than 2 kg was associated with the risk of LBW. These associations were commonly observed in all prepregnancy BMI categories. Irrespective of the GWG from pre-pregnancy to the first trimester, GWG from the first to second trimesters affects LBW and/or macrosomia. Irrespective of the GWG from the first to second trimesters, GWG from the second trimester to delivery affects LBW and/or macrosomia. LBW or macrosomia was associated with the prevalence of a sustained low or high BMI percentile until three years of age, respectively.
Conclusions
The present large national cohort study indicates that the risk of LBW or macrosomia is associated with GWG in women in Japan; the significance of this risk depends on the GWG patterns.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Medicine (miscellaneous)
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