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INTERGROWTH-21st 项目中不同隔离人群的胎儿生长和新生儿大小的相似性:胎儿生长纵向研究和新生儿横断面研究。

The likeness of fetal growth and newborn size across non-isolated populations in the INTERGROWTH-21st Project: the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study and Newborn Cross-Sectional Study.

机构信息

Nuffield Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology and Oxford Maternal & Perinatal Health Institute, Green Templeton College, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

Nuffield Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology and Oxford Maternal & Perinatal Health Institute, Green Templeton College, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

出版信息

Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2014 Oct;2(10):781-92. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(14)70121-4. Epub 2014 Jul 6.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Large differences exist in size at birth and in rates of impaired fetal growth worldwide. The relative effects of nutrition, disease, the environment, and genetics on these differences are often debated. In clinical practice, various references are often used to assess fetal growth and newborn size across populations and ethnic origins, whereas international standards for assessing growth in infants and children have been established. In the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project, our aim was to assess fetal growth and newborn size in eight geographically defined urban populations in which the health and nutrition needs of mothers were met and adequate antenatal care was provided.

METHODS

For this study, fetal growth and newborn size were measured in two INTERGROWTH-21(st) component studies using prespecified markers and the same methods, equipment, and selection criteria. In the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study (FGLS), we studied educated, affluent, healthy women, with adequate nutritional status who were at low risk of intrauterine growth restriction. The primary markers of fetal growth were ultrasound measurements of fetal crown-rump length at less than 14 weeks and 0 days of gestation and fetal head circumference from 14 weeks and 0 days to 40 weeks and 0 days of gestation, and birthlength for newborn size. In the concomitant, population-based Newborn Cross-Sectional Study (NCSS), we measured birthlength in all newborn babies from the eight geographically defined urban populations with the same methods, instruments, and staff as in FGLS. From this large NCSS cohort, we selected an FGLS-like subpopulation to match FGLS with the same eligibility criteria.

FINDINGS

Between May 14, 2009, and Aug 2, 2013, we enrolled 4607 women in FGLS and 59 137 women in NCSS. From NCSS, 20 486 (34·6%) women met the FGLS eligibility criteria, and constituted the FGLS-like subpopulation. With variance component analysis, only between 1·9% and 3·5% of the total variability in crown-rump length, fetal head circumference, and newborn birthlength could be attributed to between-site differences. With standardised site effect analysis in 16 gestational age windows from 9 weeks and 0 days of gestation to birth for the three measures (128 comparisons), only one was marginally higher than 0·5 SD of the standardised site difference range. Sensitivity analyses, excluding individual populations in turn from the pooling of all-site centiles across gestational ages, showed no noticeable effect on the 3rd, 50th, and 97th centiles derived from the remaining populations. Our populations were consistent at birth with those in the WHO Multicentre Growth Reference Study (MGRS). The mean birthlength for term newborn babies in that study was 49·5 cm (SD 1·9), which was very similar to that in the FGLS cohort (49·4 cm [1·9]) and the NCSS derived FGLS-like subpopulation (49·3 cm [1·8]).

INTERPRETATION

Fetal growth and newborn length are similar across diverse geographical settings when mothers' nutritional and health needs are met, and environmental constraints on growth are low. The findings for birthlength are in strong agreement with those of the WHO MGRS. These results provide the conceptual frame to create international standards for growth from conception to newborn baby, which will extend the present infant to childhood WHO MGRS standards.

FUNDING

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

摘要

背景

全世界在出生时的大小和胎儿生长受损的发生率方面存在巨大差异。营养、疾病、环境和遗传因素对这些差异的相对影响经常引发争议。在临床实践中,通常会使用各种参考标准来评估不同人群和种族起源的胎儿生长和新生儿大小,而国际上已经制定了评估婴儿和儿童生长的标准。在 INTERGROWTH-21st 项目中,我们的目标是评估 8 个地理位置明确的城市人群中的胎儿生长和新生儿大小,这些人群中母亲的健康和营养需求得到满足,并提供充分的产前保健。

方法

在这项研究中,我们使用预定义的标记物和相同的方法、设备和选择标准,在 INTERGROWTH-21st 项目的两项组成研究中测量胎儿生长和新生儿大小。在胎儿生长纵向研究(Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study,FGLS)中,我们研究了受过教育、富裕、健康的妇女,她们的营养状况良好,且发生宫内生长受限的风险较低。胎儿生长的主要标记物是在妊娠 14 周和 0 天之前使用超声测量胎儿头臀长,以及在妊娠 14 周和 0 天至 40 周和 0 天之间测量胎儿头围,以及用于评估新生儿大小的出生长度。在同时进行的、基于人群的新生儿横断面研究(Newborn Cross-Sectional Study,NCSS)中,我们使用相同的方法、仪器和工作人员在 8 个地理位置明确的城市人群中测量所有新生儿的出生长度。从这个庞大的 NCSS 队列中,我们选择了一个与 FGLS 具有相同资格标准的 FGLS 样亚群。

结果

在 2009 年 5 月 14 日至 2013 年 8 月 2 日期间,我们在 FGLS 中招募了 4607 名妇女,在 NCSS 中招募了 59137 名妇女。从 NCSS 中,有 20486 名(34.6%)妇女符合 FGLS 的资格标准,构成了 FGLS 样亚群。通过方差分量分析,只有 1.9%至 3.5%的头臀长、胎儿头围和新生儿出生长度的总变异可以归因于不同站点之间的差异。在 128 次比较的 16 个妊娠年龄窗口中,使用标准化站点效应分析三种测量方法(9 周和 0 天妊娠至出生),只有一个略高于标准化站点差异范围的 0.5 标准差。敏感性分析,依次排除所有年龄组的所有人群,从剩余人群中得出的第 3、第 50 和第 97 百分位数没有明显影响。我们的人群在出生时与世界卫生组织(WHO)多中心生长参考研究(Multicentre Growth Reference Study,MGRS)中的人群一致。该研究中足月新生儿的平均出生长度为 49.5 厘米(标准差 1.9),与 FGLS 队列(49.4 厘米[1.9])和从 NCSS 得出的 FGLS 样亚群(49.3 厘米[1.8])非常相似。

解释

当母亲的营养和健康需求得到满足,并且生长的环境限制较低时,胎儿生长和新生儿长度在不同的地理环境中是相似的。出生长度的结果与世界卫生组织(WHO)MGRS 的结果非常一致。这些结果为创建从受孕到新生儿的国际生长标准提供了概念框架,这将扩展目前婴儿到儿童的 WHO MGRS 标准。

资金

比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会。

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