Department of Environmental Medicine, Kochi Medical School, Kochi University, Nankoku, Kochi, 783-8505, Japan.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kochi Medical School, Kochi University, Nankoku, Kochi, Japan.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2022 Jul 16;22(1):568. doi: 10.1186/s12884-022-04898-3.
Extra energy intake is commonly recommended for pregnant women to support fetal growth. However, relevant data regarding variations in energy intake and expenditure, body mass index and gestational weight gain (GWG) are frequently not considered. This study aimed to investigate how energy intake during pregnancy and gestational weight gain (GWG) are associated with birth weight.
Early pregnant women were recruited into a Japanese nationwide prospective birth cohort study between 2011 and 2014. We analysed data of 89,817 mother-child pairs of live-born non-anomalous singletons after excluding births before 28 weeks or after 42 weeks. Energy intake during pregnancy was estimated from self-administered food frequency questionnaires (FFQ) and was stratified into low, medium, and high. Participants completed the FFQ in mid-pregnancy (mean 27.9 weeks) by recalling food consumption at the beginning of pregnancy. Effects of energy intake on birth weight and mediation by GWG were estimated using the Karlson-Holm-Breen method; the method separates the impact of confounding in the comparison of conditional and unconditional parameter estimates in nonlinear probability models. Relative risks and risk differences for abnormal birth size were calculated.
Mean daily energy intake, GWG, and birth weight were 1682.1 (533.6) kcal, 10.3 (4.0) kg, and 3032.3 (401.4) g, respectively. 6767 and 9010 women had small-for-gestational-age and large-for-gestational-age infants, respectively. Relative to low energy intake, moderate and high intakes increased adjusted birth weights by 13 g and 24 g, respectively: 58 and 69% of these effects, respectively, were mediated by GWG. Compared with the moderate energy intake group, the low energy intake group had seven more women per 1000 women with a small-for-gestational-age birth, whereas the high energy intake group had eight more women per 1000 women with a large-for-gestational-age birth.
GWG mediates the effect of energy intake on birth weight. All pregnant women should be given adequate nutritional guidance for optimal GWG and fetal growth.
通常建议孕妇额外摄入能量,以支持胎儿生长。然而,关于能量摄入和支出、体重指数和妊娠体重增加(GWG)的变化相关数据经常没有被考虑到。本研究旨在探讨妊娠期间的能量摄入和 GWG 与出生体重的关系。
2011 年至 2014 年期间,我们在日本全国范围内开展了一项前瞻性出生队列研究,招募了早期孕妇。在排除了 28 周前或 42 周后分娩的病例后,我们分析了 89817 对活产非畸形单胎母婴对的数据。妊娠期间的能量摄入通过自我管理的食物频率问卷(FFQ)进行估计,并分为低、中、高摄入水平。参与者在妊娠中期(平均 27.9 周)时通过回忆妊娠早期的饮食情况完成 FFQ。采用 Karlson-Holm-Breen 法估计能量摄入对出生体重的影响,并通过非线性概率模型中的条件和无条件参数估计的比较来分离混杂因素的影响;该方法将比较条件和无条件参数估计的影响分离出来。计算了异常出生体重的相对风险和风险差异。
平均每日能量摄入、GWG 和出生体重分别为 1682.1(533.6)kcal、10.3(4.0)kg 和 3032.3(401.4)g。6767 名和 9010 名妇女的婴儿分别为小于胎龄儿和大于胎龄儿。与低能量摄入相比,中、高能量摄入分别使调整后的出生体重增加了 13g 和 24g:分别有 58%和 69%的作用是通过 GWG 介导的。与中能量摄入组相比,低能量摄入组每 1000 名妇女中多 7 名小于胎龄儿出生,而高能量摄入组每 1000 名妇女中多 8 名大于胎龄儿出生。
GWG 介导了能量摄入对出生体重的影响。所有孕妇都应接受足够的营养指导,以实现最佳 GWG 和胎儿生长。