The University of Canberra, School of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Health, Locked Bag 1, ACT, Australia, 2601.
Public Health. 2020 Aug;185:381-385. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2020.05.029. Epub 2020 Aug 2.
Both maternal body mass index (BMI) and smoking during pregnancy have been associated with a range of adverse maternal and infant birth outcomes. This study aimed to identify whether these independent variables had an interacting relationship with small for gestational age in an Australian obstetric cohort.
A retrospective cohort design used data from the Birthing Outcomes System of a major tertiary hospital in Australia.
A total of 14,487 singleton births between January 2008 and December 2013 were included in the analysis. Chi-squared tests and one-way analysis of variance were used for the comparison of categorical and continuous variables, respectively. Adjusted odds ratios (AORs) were calculated to determine the association of smoking status with the outcome variable of interest, and these are reported for each maternal BMI category.
Of the 14,487 women, 716 (4.9%) were underweight (BMI ≤18 kg/m), 7268 (50.2%) had healthy weight (BMI = 19-24 kg/m), 3658 (25.3%) were overweight (BMI = 25-29 kg/m), 1558 (10.8%) had class I obesity (BMI = 30-34 kg/m), 711 (4.9%) had class II obesity (BMI = 35-39 kg/m) and 576 (3.9%) had class III obesity (BMI = 40+ kg/m). Of all women, 10.8% reported being current smokers, 82.0% reported to have never smoked and 4.0% reported to have stopped smoking during or before pregnancy. Smokers with a BMI ≥40 kg/m were 4.5 (AOR = 4.508; 95% confidence interval: 2.068-9.828) times more likely to give birth to a small-for-gestational-age infant than non-smokers within the same BMI category. This increased risk was not observed in women who ceased smoking before or during pregnancy.
Our study supports the efficacy of antismoking policies within maternal public health. In addition, greater support with respect to smoking cessation is indicated for women during pregnancy with an elevated BMI.
母体体重指数(BMI)和孕期吸烟都与一系列不良的母婴出生结局有关。本研究旨在确定这两个独立变量是否与澳大利亚产科队列中小儿生长受限存在交互关系。
采用回顾性队列设计,利用澳大利亚一家主要三级医院的分娩结局系统的数据。
共纳入 2008 年 1 月至 2013 年 12 月期间的 14487 例单胎分娩。采用卡方检验和单因素方差分析分别比较分类变量和连续变量。为了确定吸烟状况与感兴趣的结局变量之间的关联,计算了调整后的优势比(AOR),并针对每个母体 BMI 类别报告了这些结果。
在 14487 名女性中,716 名(4.9%)为体重不足(BMI≤18kg/m),7268 名(50.2%)为健康体重(BMI=19-24kg/m),3658 名(25.3%)为超重(BMI=25-29kg/m),1558 名(10.8%)为 I 度肥胖(BMI=30-34kg/m),711 名(4.9%)为 II 度肥胖(BMI=35-39kg/m),576 名(3.9%)为 III 度肥胖(BMI=40+kg/m)。所有女性中,10.8%报告为当前吸烟者,82.0%报告从未吸烟,4.0%报告在孕期或之前已戒烟。BMI≥40kg/m 的吸烟者比同一 BMI 类别的非吸烟者生出小于胎龄儿的可能性高 4.5 倍(AOR=4.508;95%置信区间:2.068-9.828)。在孕期或之前已戒烟的女性中,没有观察到这种风险增加。
本研究支持在母婴公共卫生领域实施戒烟政策的有效性。此外,对于 BMI 较高的孕妇,需要提供更多关于戒烟的支持。