Metcalfe Amy, Lisonkova Sarka, Joseph K S
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of British Columbia and the Children's and Women's Hospital and Health Centre of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2015 Sep 29;15:233. doi: 10.1186/s12884-015-0670-5.
The literature attributes secular declines in small-for-gestational age (SGA) live births to changes in maternal smoking and other maternal characteristics. However, there are reasons to believe that the observed reductions in SGA may be a consequence of early delivery following obstetric intervention.
We examined temporal trends in obstetrical intervention and SGA among singleton live births in the United States from 1990 to 2010. The modified Kitagawa decomposition, based on the fetuses-at-risk approach, was used to assess the relative contribution of changes in the gestational age distribution and gestational age-specific SGA to overall changes in SGA. Reductions in SGA rates due to a left shift in the gestational age distribution were assumed to primarily reflect increased obstetrical intervention, whereas decreases in overall SGA due to decreases in gestational-age-specific SGA rates were assumed to reflect declines in risk factors.
Temporal trends in SGA followed a non-linear pattern, with substantial declines from 10.1% in 1990-92 to 8.9% in 2002-04, followed by a small increase to 9.1% in 2008-10. Rates of maternal smoking steadily decreased throughout the same time period and changes in SGA rates were more consistent with changes in the gestational age distribution. The modified Kitagawa decomposition analysis also attributed the initial decline in SGA rates to changes in the gestational age distribution.
Complex temporal pattern in SGA rates cannot be explained by the linear pattern of changes in factors like maternal smoking. Changes in the gestational age distribution are more consistent with the observed secular trends in SGA rates.
文献将小于胎龄儿(SGA)活产率的长期下降归因于孕妇吸烟及其他孕妇特征的变化。然而,有理由相信观察到的SGA下降可能是产科干预后早产的结果。
我们研究了1990年至2010年美国单胎活产中产科干预和SGA的时间趋势。基于风险胎儿方法的改良北川分解法用于评估胎龄分布变化和特定胎龄SGA对SGA总体变化的相对贡献。由于胎龄分布左移导致的SGA率下降主要反映产科干预增加,而由于特定胎龄SGA率下降导致的总体SGA下降则反映危险因素的减少。
SGA的时间趋势呈非线性模式,从1990 - 1992年的10.1%大幅下降至2002 - 2004年的8.9%,随后在2008 - 2010年小幅上升至9.1%。在同一时期,孕妇吸烟率稳步下降,SGA率的变化与胎龄分布的变化更为一致。改良北川分解分析也将SGA率的最初下降归因于胎龄分布的变化。
SGA率的复杂时间模式无法用孕妇吸烟等因素变化的线性模式来解释。胎龄分布的变化与观察到的SGA率长期趋势更为一致。