1Epidemiology BranchDivision of Intramural Population Health Research,Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development,6710B Rockledge Drive,MSC 7004,Bethesda,MD20817,USA.
2Biostatistics Branch,Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics,National Cancer Institute,Rockville,MD,USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2019 Apr;22(5):797-804. doi: 10.1017/S1368980018003749. Epub 2019 Feb 11.
To characterize the association of longitudinal changes in maternal anthropometric measures with neonatal anthropometry and to assess to what extent late-gestational changes in maternal anthropometry are associated with neonatal body composition.
In a prospective cohort of pregnant women, maternal anthropometry was measured at six study visits across pregnancy and after birth, neonates were measured and fat and lean mass calculated. We estimated maternal anthropometric trajectories and separately assessed rate of change in the second (15-28 weeks) and third trimester (28-39 weeks) in relation to neonatal anthropometry. We investigated the extent to which tertiles of third-trimester maternal anthropometry change were associated with neonatal outcomes.
Women were recruited from twelve US sites (2009-2013).ParticipantsNon-obese women with singleton pregnancies (n 2334).
A higher rate of increase in gestational weight gain was associated with larger-birth-weight infants with greater lean and fat mass. In contrast, higher rates of increase in maternal anthropometry measures were not associated with infant birth weight but were associated with decreased neonatal lean mass. In the third trimester, women in the tertile of lowest change in triceps skinfold (-0·57 to -0·06 mm per week) had neonates with 35·8 g more lean mass than neonates of mothers in the middle tertile of rate of change (-0·05 to 0·06 mm per week).
The rate of change in third-trimester maternal anthropometry measures may be related to neonatal lean and fat mass yet have a negligible impact on infant birth weight, indicating that neonatal anthropometry may provide additional information over birth weight alone.
描述母体人体测量学指标的纵向变化与新生儿人体测量学的关系,并评估妊娠晚期母体人体测量学变化与新生儿身体成分的关联程度。
在一项前瞻性孕妇队列研究中,在整个妊娠期间和产后共进行了 6 次研究访视,测量了母体人体测量学指标,测量了新生儿,并计算了脂肪量和瘦体量。我们估计了母体人体测量学轨迹,并分别评估了第二(15-28 周)和第三(28-39 周) trimester 中变化率与新生儿人体测量学的关系。我们调查了第三 trimester 母体人体测量学变化的 tertiles 与新生儿结局的关联程度。
美国 12 个地点招募了女性(2009-2013 年)。
非肥胖的单胎妊娠妇女(n=2334)。
体重增长速度的增加与更大出生体重的婴儿有关,这些婴儿的瘦体重和脂肪量更大。相比之下,母体人体测量学指标的增长率与婴儿出生体重无关,但与新生儿瘦体重减少有关。在第三 trimester,肱三头肌皮褶厚度减少 tertiles 中(每周-0.57 至-0.06 毫米)的妇女,其新生儿的瘦体重比变化率中间 tertiles(每周 0.05 至 0.06 毫米)的母亲的新生儿多 35.8 克。
第三 trimester 母体人体测量学指标的变化率可能与新生儿的瘦体重和脂肪量有关,但对婴儿的出生体重影响微不足道,这表明新生儿人体测量学指标可能比出生体重单独提供更多信息。