Author:
Aizawa Misato,Murakami Keiko,Takahashi Ippei,Onuma Tomomi,Noda Aoi,Ueno Fumihiko,Matsuzaki Fumiko,Ishikuro Mami,Obara Taku,Hamada Hirotaka,Iwama Noriyuki,Saito Masatoshi,Sugawara Junichi,Yaegashi Nobuo,Kuriyama Shinichi
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Low birth weight is associated with an increased risk of developing chronic diseases in adulthood, with a particularly high incidence in Japan among developed countries. Maternal undernutrition is a risk factor for low birth weight, but the association between the timing of food intake and infant birth weight has not been investigated. This study aimed to examine the association between breakfast intake frequency among Japanese pregnant women and infant birth weight.
Methods
Of all pregnant women who participated in the Tohoku Medical Megabank Project Three Generation Cohort Study, 16,820 who answered the required questions were included in the analysis. The frequency of breakfast intake from pre- to early pregnancy and from early to mid-pregnancy was classified into four groups: every day and 5–6, 3–4, and 0–2 times/week. Multivariate linear regression models were constructed to examine the association between breakfast intake frequency among pregnant women and infant birth weight.
Results
The percentage of pregnant women who consumed breakfast daily was 74% in the pre- to early pregnancy period and 79% in the early to mid-pregnancy period. The average infant birth weight was 3,071 g. Compared to women who had breakfast daily from pre- to early pregnancy, those who had breakfast 0–2 times/week had lower infant birth weight (β = -38.2, 95% confidence interval [CI]: -56.5, -20.0). Similarly, compared to women who had breakfast daily from early to mid-pregnancy, those who had breakfast 0–2 times/week had lower infant birth weight (β = -41.5, 95% CI: -63.3, -19.6).
Conclusions
Less frequent breakfast intake before and mid-pregnancy was associated with lower infant birth weight.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynecology