Maternal interpregnancy weight change and premature birth: findings from an English population-based cohort study
Maternal interpregnancy weight change and premature birth: findings from an English population-based cohort study
Background
The relationship between maternal weight change between pregnancies and premature birth is unclear. This study aimed to investigate whether interpregnancy weight change between first and second, or second and third pregnancy is associated with premature birth.
Methods
Routinely collected data from 2003 to 2018 from one English maternity centre was used to produce two cohorts. The primary cohort (n = 14,961 women) consisted of first and second live-birth pregnancies. The secondary cohort (n = 5,108 women) consisted of second and third live-birth pregnancies. Logistic regression models were used to examine associations between interpregnancy BMI change and premature births adjusted for confounders. Subgroup analyses were carried out, stratifying by initial pregnancy BMI groups and analysing spontaneous and indicated premature births separately.
Results
In the primary cohort, 3.4% (n = 514) of births were premature compared to 4.2% (n = 212) in the secondary cohort, with fewer indicated than spontaneous premature births in both cohorts.
Primary cohort
Weight loss (>3kg/m2) was associated with increased odds of premature birth (adjusted odds ratio (aOR):3.50, 95% CI: 1.78–6.88), and spontaneous premature birth (aOR: 3.34, 95%CI: 1.60–6.98), in women who were normal weight (BMI 18.5-25kg/m2) at first pregnancy. Weight gain >1kg/m2 was not associated with premature birth regardless of starting BMI.
Secondary cohort
Losing >3kg/m2 was associated with increased odds of premature birth (aOR: 2.01, 95%CI: 1.05–3.87), when analysing the whole sample, but not when restricting the analysis to women who were overweight or obese at second pregnancy.
Conclusions
Normal-weight women who lose significant weight (>3kg/m2) between their first and second live pregnancies have greater odds of premature birth compared to normal-weight women who remain weight stable in the interpregnancy period. There was no evidence of association between weight change in women who were overweight or obese at the start of their first pregnancy and premature birth.
Grove, Grace
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Ziauddeen, Nida
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Harris, Scott
19ea097b-df15-4f0f-be19-8ac42c190028
Alwan, Nisreen A.
0d37b320-f325-4ed3-ba51-0fe2866d5382
21 November 2019
Grove, Grace
aa73d66b-af26-4f94-afeb-04c89fe1debf
Ziauddeen, Nida
8b233a4a-9763-410b-90c7-df5c7d1a26e4
Harris, Scott
19ea097b-df15-4f0f-be19-8ac42c190028
Alwan, Nisreen A.
0d37b320-f325-4ed3-ba51-0fe2866d5382
Grove, Grace, Ziauddeen, Nida, Harris, Scott and Alwan, Nisreen A.
(2019)
Maternal interpregnancy weight change and premature birth: findings from an English population-based cohort study.
PLoS ONE, 14 (11), [e0225400].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0225400).
Abstract
Background
The relationship between maternal weight change between pregnancies and premature birth is unclear. This study aimed to investigate whether interpregnancy weight change between first and second, or second and third pregnancy is associated with premature birth.
Methods
Routinely collected data from 2003 to 2018 from one English maternity centre was used to produce two cohorts. The primary cohort (n = 14,961 women) consisted of first and second live-birth pregnancies. The secondary cohort (n = 5,108 women) consisted of second and third live-birth pregnancies. Logistic regression models were used to examine associations between interpregnancy BMI change and premature births adjusted for confounders. Subgroup analyses were carried out, stratifying by initial pregnancy BMI groups and analysing spontaneous and indicated premature births separately.
Results
In the primary cohort, 3.4% (n = 514) of births were premature compared to 4.2% (n = 212) in the secondary cohort, with fewer indicated than spontaneous premature births in both cohorts.
Primary cohort
Weight loss (>3kg/m2) was associated with increased odds of premature birth (adjusted odds ratio (aOR):3.50, 95% CI: 1.78–6.88), and spontaneous premature birth (aOR: 3.34, 95%CI: 1.60–6.98), in women who were normal weight (BMI 18.5-25kg/m2) at first pregnancy. Weight gain >1kg/m2 was not associated with premature birth regardless of starting BMI.
Secondary cohort
Losing >3kg/m2 was associated with increased odds of premature birth (aOR: 2.01, 95%CI: 1.05–3.87), when analysing the whole sample, but not when restricting the analysis to women who were overweight or obese at second pregnancy.
Conclusions
Normal-weight women who lose significant weight (>3kg/m2) between their first and second live pregnancies have greater odds of premature birth compared to normal-weight women who remain weight stable in the interpregnancy period. There was no evidence of association between weight change in women who were overweight or obese at the start of their first pregnancy and premature birth.
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Accepted/In Press date: 2 November 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 November 2019
Published date: 21 November 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 436039
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436039
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: a0f82166-3bad-4586-8f2f-e4c77fff50d3
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Date deposited: 26 Nov 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:07
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Author:
Grace Grove
Author:
Nida Ziauddeen
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