Cantonwine David E, Ferguson Kelly K, Mukherjee Bhramar, Chen Yin-Hsiu, Smith Nicole A, Robinson Julian N, Doubilet Peter M, Meeker John D, McElrath Thomas F
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Jan 5;11(1):e0146532. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0146532. eCollection 2016.
Impaired or suboptimal fetal growth is associated with an increased risk of perinatal morbidity and mortality. By utilizing readily available clinical data on the relative size of the fetus at multiple points in pregnancy, including delivery, future epidemiological research can improve our understanding of the impacts of maternal, fetal, and environmental factors on fetal growth at different windows during pregnancy. This study presents mean and standard deviation ultrasound measurements from a clinically representative US population that can be utilized for creating Z-scores to this end. Between 2006 and 2012, 18, 904 non-anomalous pregnancies that received prenatal care, first and second trimester ultrasound evaluations, and ultimately delivered singleton newborns at Brigham and Women's hospital in Boston were used to create the standard population. To illustrate the utility of this standard, we created Z-scores for ultrasound and delivery measurements for a cohort study population and examined associations with factors known to be associated with fetal growth. In addition to cross-sectional regression models, we created linear mixed models and generalized additive mixed models to illustrate how these scores can be utilized longitudinally and for the identification of windows of susceptibility. After adjustment for a priori confounders, maternal BMI was positively associated with increased fetal size beginning in the second trimester in cross-sectional models. Female infants and maternal smoking were associated with consistently reduced fetal size in the longitudinal models. Maternal age had a non-significant association with increased size in the first trimester that was attenuated as gestation progressed. As the growth measurements examined here are widely available in contemporary obstetrical practice, these data may be abstracted from medical records by investigators and standardized with the population means presented here. This will enable easy extension of clinical data to epidemiologic studies investigating novel maternal, fetal, and environmental factors that may impact fetal growth.
胎儿生长受损或未达最佳状态与围产期发病率和死亡率增加相关。通过利用孕期多个时间点(包括分娩时)胎儿相对大小的现成临床数据,未来的流行病学研究可以增进我们对母体、胎儿和环境因素在孕期不同阶段对胎儿生长影响的理解。本研究呈现了来自具有临床代表性的美国人群的超声测量均值和标准差,可用于为此创建Z分数。2006年至2012年期间,在波士顿布莱根妇女医院接受产前护理、孕早期和孕中期超声评估并最终分娩单胎新生儿的18904例正常妊娠被用于创建标准人群。为说明该标准的实用性,我们为一项队列研究人群的超声和分娩测量创建了Z分数,并研究了与已知与胎儿生长相关因素的关联。除横断面回归模型外,我们还创建了线性混合模型和广义相加混合模型,以说明这些分数如何用于纵向研究以及识别易感性窗口。在对先验混杂因素进行调整后,横断面模型中,母体BMI从孕中期开始与胎儿大小增加呈正相关。纵向模型中,女婴和母体吸烟与胎儿大小持续减小相关。孕早期母体年龄与胎儿大小增加的关联不显著,且随着孕周增加这种关联减弱。由于此处检查的生长测量数据在当代产科实践中广泛可得,研究人员可从医疗记录中提取这些数据,并根据此处给出的人群均值进行标准化。这将使临床数据能够轻松扩展到调查可能影响胎儿生长的新型母体、胎儿和环境因素的流行病学研究中。