Relationship between weight retention at 6 weeks postpartum and the risk of large-for-gestational age birth in a second pregnancy in China: a retrospective cohort study

Author:

Liu Jing,Song Guang,Zhao Ge,Meng TaoORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveWe aimed to investigate the association between weight retention at 6 weeks postpartum after the first pregnancy and large-for-gestational age (LGA) risk in a subsequent pregnancy.Study designA retrospective cohort study.SettingA tertiary hospital of China.Participants5950 Chinese singleton pregnancies that delivered their second singletons between 28 and 42 weeks of gestation.Outcomes measuresWe calculated the weight retention at 6 weeks postpartum after the first pregnancy (the body mass index (BMI) at 6 weeks after the first birth minus the prepregnant BMI of the first pregnancy) and the gestational weight gain in the second pregnancy. We used the logistic regression to obtain adjusted OR. We determined the relationship between maternal BMI change at 6 weeks after the first pregnancy and LGA risk in the second pregnancy.ResultsRelative to other categories of BMI change at 6 weeks postpartum, women who gained ≥3 kg/m2 compared with the prepregnancy BMI were at increased LGA risk. The stratified analysis showed that LGA risk was increased in the second pregnancy in underweight and normal weight women who gained ≥3 kg/m2 when using remain stable women as the reference group (OR=3.35, 95% CI 1.11 to 10.12 for underweight women; OR=2.23, 95% CI 1.43 to 3.45 for normal weight women) at 6 weeks postpartum. For the women who gained ≥3 kg/m2 at 6 weeks postpartum, LGA risk was increased in normal weight women with an adequate (OR=3.21, 95% CI 1.10 to 9.33) and excessive (OR=2.62, 95% CI 1.02 to 6.76) gestational weight in the second pregnancy when using obese women as the reference.ConclusionPostpartum weight retention at 6 weeks after the first pregnancy provides us a new early window to identify LGA risk in a subsequent pregnancy and allows us to implement primary preventative strategies.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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