Starling Anne P, Brinton John T, Glueck Deborah H, Shapiro Allison L, Harrod Curtis S, Lynch Anne M, Siega-Riz Anna Maria, Dabelea Dana
From the Departments of Epidemiology (APS, ALS, CSH, and DD) and Biostatistics and Informatics (JTB and DHG), Colorado School of Public Health, Aurora, CO; the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO (AML); and the Departments of Epidemiology and Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC (AMS-R).
Am J Clin Nutr. 2015 Feb;101(2):302-9. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.114.094946. Epub 2014 Dec 3.
Maternal obesity and weight gain during pregnancy are risk factors for child obesity. Associations may be attributable to causal effects of the intrauterine environment or genetic and postnatal environmental factors.
We estimated associations of maternal prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) and gestational weight gain (GWG) overall and in early pregnancy, midpregnancy, and late pregnancy with neonatal adiposity.
Participants were 826 women enrolled in a Colorado prebirth cohort who delivered term infants (2010-2013). GWG to 39 wk of gestation was predicted by using mixed models, and early pregnancy, midpregnancy, and late pregnancy rates of GWG (0-17, 17-27, and 27 wk to delivery) were calculated from repeated weight measures. Neonatal body composition was measured by using air-displacement plethysmography ≤3 d after birth.
Each1-kg/m(2) increase in maternal BMI was associated with increased neonatal fat mass (5.2 g; 95% CI: 3.5, 6.9 g), fat-free mass (7.7 g; 95% CI: 4.5, 10.9 g), and percentage of body fat (0.12%; 95% CI: 0.08%, 0.16%). Each 0.1-kg/wk increase in predicted GWG was associated with increased fat mass (24.0 g; 95% CI: 17.4, 30.5 g), fat-free mass (34.0 g; 95% CI: 21.4, 46.6 g), and percentage of body fat (0.55%; 95% CI: 0.37%, 0.72%). No interaction was detected between BMI and GWG in their effects on neonatal body composition. Early pregnancy, midpregnancy, and late pregnancy rates of GWG were independently associated with fat mass and percentage of body fat. Midpregnancy and late pregnancy GWGs were associated with fat-free mass. An observed GWG that exceeded recommendations was associated with higher neonatal fat mass and fat-free mass but not percentage of body fat relative to adequate GWG.
Maternal prepregnancy BMI and GWG, including period-specific GWG, were positively and independently associated with neonatal adiposity. Associations of early and midpregnancy weight gain with neonatal adiposity support the hypothesis that greater maternal weight gain during pregnancy, regardless of prepregnancy BMI, is directly related to offspring adiposity at birth. The Healthy Start study was registered as an observational study at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02273297.
孕期母亲肥胖和体重增加是儿童肥胖的危险因素。这种关联可能归因于子宫内环境的因果效应或遗传及产后环境因素。
我们估计了孕前体重指数(BMI)和孕期体重增加(GWG)总体以及孕早期、孕中期和孕晚期与新生儿肥胖的关联。
参与者为科罗拉多州产前队列中826名分娩足月儿(2010 - 2013年)的女性。采用混合模型预测至妊娠39周的GWG,并根据重复测量的体重计算孕早期、孕中期和孕晚期的GWG率(0 - 17周、17 - 27周以及27周至分娩)。出生后≤3天采用空气置换体积描记法测量新生儿身体成分。
母亲BMI每增加1 kg/m²,新生儿脂肪量增加(5.2 g;95%CI:3.5,6.9 g)、去脂体重增加(7.7 g;95%CI:4.5,10.9 g)、体脂百分比增加(0.12%;95%CI:0.08%,0.16%)。预测的GWG每增加0.1 kg/周,脂肪量增加(24.0 g;95%CI:17.4,30.5 g)、去脂体重增加(34.0 g;95%CI:21.4,46.6 g)、体脂百分比增加(0.55%;95%CI:0.37%,0.72%)。未检测到BMI和GWG对新生儿身体成分影响的交互作用。孕早期、孕中期和孕晚期的GWG率分别与脂肪量和体脂百分比独立相关。孕中期和孕晚期的GWG与去脂体重相关。相对于适当的GWG,观察到的超过推荐值的GWG与更高的新生儿脂肪量和去脂体重相关,但与体脂百分比无关。
母亲孕前BMI和GWG,包括特定时期的GWG,与新生儿肥胖呈正相关且相互独立。孕早期和孕中期体重增加与新生儿肥胖的关联支持了这样一种假设,即孕期母亲体重增加更多,无论孕前BMI如何,都与出生时后代肥胖直接相关。“健康开端”研究在clinicaltrials.gov上注册为观察性研究,编号为NCT02273297。