Watson Hunna J, Zerwas Stephanie, Torgersen Leila, Gustavson Kristin, Diemer Elizabeth W, Knudsen Gun Peggy, Reichborn-Kjennerud Ted, Bulik Cynthia M
Department of Psychiatry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Division of Mental Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health.
J Abnorm Psychol. 2017 Jul;126(5):552-564. doi: 10.1037/abn0000241.
Previous studies of the relationship between maternal eating disorders and adverse perinatal outcomes have failed to control for familial transmission of perinatal phenotypes, which may confound the reported association. In a unique design afforded by the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study and Medical Birth Registry of Norway, we linked three generations through birth register records and maternal-reported survey data to investigate whether maternal eating disorders increase risk after parsing out the contribution of familial transmission of perinatal phenotypes. The samples were 70,881 pregnancies in grandmother-mother-child triads for analyses concerning eating disorder exposure during pregnancy and 52,348 for analyses concerning lifetime maternal eating disorder exposure. As hypothesized, eating disorders predicted a higher incidence of perinatal complications even after adjusting for grandmaternal perinatal phenotypes. For example, anorexia nervosa immediately prior to pregnancy was associated with smaller birth length (relative risk = 1.62; 95% CI [1.20, 2.14]), bulimia nervosa with induced labor (relative risk = 1.21; 95% CI [1.07, 1.36]), and binge-eating disorder with several delivery complications, larger birth length (relative risk = 1.25; 95% CI [1.17, 1.34]), and large-for-gestational-age (relative risk = 1.04; 95% CI [1.01, 1.06]). Maternal pregravid body mass index and gestational weight mediated most associations. Our results support that exposure to eating disorders increases the risk for negative health outcomes in pregnant women and their babies. (PsycINFO Database Record
先前关于母亲饮食失调与围产期不良结局之间关系的研究未能控制围产期表型的家族性传递,这可能会混淆所报告的关联。在挪威母婴队列研究和挪威医学出生登记处提供的独特设计中,我们通过出生登记记录和母亲报告的调查数据将三代人联系起来,以调查在排除围产期表型家族性传递的影响后,母亲饮食失调是否会增加风险。样本包括70881例祖母-母亲-孩子三联体妊娠,用于分析孕期饮食失调暴露情况,以及52348例用于分析母亲终生饮食失调暴露情况。正如所假设的那样,即使在调整了祖母的围产期表型后,饮食失调仍预示着围产期并发症的发生率更高。例如,妊娠前的神经性厌食症与出生身长较短有关(相对风险 = 1.62;95%可信区间[1.20, 2.14]),神经性贪食症与引产有关(相对风险 = 1.21;95%可信区间[1.07, 1.36]),暴饮暴食症与多种分娩并发症、出生身长较长(相对风险 = 1.25;95%可信区间[1.17, 1.34])以及大于胎龄有关(相对风险 = 1.04;95%可信区间[1.01, 1.06])。母亲孕前体重指数和孕期体重介导了大多数关联。我们的结果支持,接触饮食失调会增加孕妇及其婴儿出现负面健康结局的风险。(PsycINFO数据库记录)