School of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science, College of Agriculture Engineering and Science, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Department of Statistics, Bahir Dar University, Bahir, Dar, Ethiopia.
Sci Rep. 2020 Mar 26;10(1):5491. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-62447-4.
Preterm birth is a common cause of death worldwide of children under the age of five years. This condition is linked with short and long term neonatal morbidity and mortality. Maternal nutrition during pregnancy has a profound effect on fetal growth and development and subsequently also on the incidence of preterm birth. The aim of this study was to assess the differential effect of dietary patterns of pregnant women across ordered levels of preterm birth. Dietary assessments were performed using a food frequency questionnaire, presented to 687 pregnant women, in the "Mother and Child in the Environment" birth cohort during the period of 2013 to 2017. Each pregnancy resulted in a live birth. Eight dietary patterns were extracted, using exploratory factor analysis. The partial proportional odds model was employed to model severity levels of preterm birth. The partial proportional odds model has been recognized to be a flexible approach since it allows the effect of predictor variables to vary across categories of the ordinal response variable of interest. Women with increased consumption of vegetable-rich foods showed a reduced risk of very to moderately preterm birth incidence (AOR = 0.73, 95% CI = (0.531, 0.981), p = 0.036). Lower odds of very/moderately preterm birth compared to late preterm or term birth were observed for women following "nuts and rice foods" dietary pattern (AOR = 0.25, 95% CI = (0.099, 0.621), p = 0.003). High dietary consumption of starch foods dietary pattern (AOR = 2.09, 95% CI = (1.158, 3.769), p = 0.014) was associated with the most severe level of preterm birth outcome incidence, i.e. very/moderately preterm birth. The partial proportional odds modeling allowed the description of the effect of maternal dietary patterns across the different severity levels of preterm birth.
早产是全球 5 岁以下儿童死亡的一个常见原因。这种情况与新生儿短期和长期发病率和死亡率有关。孕妇在怀孕期间的营养对胎儿的生长和发育有深远的影响,进而也会影响早产的发生率。本研究的目的是评估孕妇饮食模式在不同程度早产中的差异影响。在 2013 年至 2017 年期间,通过使用食物频率问卷对“环境中的母婴”出生队列中的 687 名孕妇进行了饮食评估。每个怀孕都导致了活产。使用探索性因子分析提取了 8 种饮食模式。使用部分比例优势模型对早产严重程度水平进行建模。部分比例优势模型被认为是一种灵活的方法,因为它允许预测变量的影响在感兴趣的有序因变量的类别中变化。富含蔬菜的食物摄入量增加的女性,其极早产至中度早产的发生率降低(OR=0.73,95%CI=(0.531,0.981),p=0.036)。与晚期早产或足月产相比,遵循“坚果和米饭类食物”饮食模式的女性极早产/中度早产的可能性较低(OR=0.25,95%CI=(0.099,0.621),p=0.003)。高淀粉类食物饮食模式(OR=2.09,95%CI=(1.158,3.769),p=0.014)的高摄入量与最严重程度的早产结局发生率相关,即极早产/中度早产。部分比例优势模型允许描述孕妇饮食模式在不同严重程度的早产中的作用。