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Infant body composition in a randomised trial of a maternal nutritional supplement during preconception and pregnancy

Infant body composition in a randomised trial of a maternal nutritional supplement during preconception and pregnancy
Infant body composition in a randomised trial of a maternal nutritional supplement during preconception and pregnancy
Background: in a multinational randomized controlled trial, we previously showed that maternal supplementation with myo-inositol, probiotics, and micronutrients was associated with reduced incidence of rapid infant weight gain and high body mass index (BMI) at two years among offspring. It was unclear whether these differences in weight gain and body mass were due to reduced adiposity. Therefore, we aimed to determine whether there were any differences in body composition.

Methods: body composition was measured using bioelectrical impedance spectroscopy at six weeks, six months, one year, and two years among offspring born to mothers who received a nutritional intervention (n = 268) or control (n = 264) supplement preconception and during pregnancy.

Results: there were no group-level differences in body composition, except at two years, when fat-free mass was greater among control offspring [adjusted mean difference (aMD) 0.14 kg, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.03, 0.25, P = 0.012]. However, there were no differences in mean percentage fat mass (%FM) at any time. In both groups, rapid weight gain [Δ weight > 0.67 standard deviation (SD) from birth to one year] was associated with greater %FM (aMD 2.0% at six months, 2.0% at one year, 1.4% at two years) compared with those who did not have rapid weight gain. Likewise, high BMI (≥ 95 percentile) at two years was associated with greater %FM (aMD 2.5%).

Conclusions: a maternal nutritional intervention did not lead to differences in average offspring body composition in the first two years of life. However, fewer offspring from the supplemented group experienced rapid weight gain and high BMI, characterized by greater %FM.
Adiposity, Bioelectrical impedance, Body weight, Randomized controlled trial
1708-8569
361-371
Lyons-Reid, Jaz
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Derraik, José G.B.
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Ward, Leigh C.
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Kenealy, Timothy
c032e16b-65a8-4156-bc79-422f6c0e7079
Albert, Benjamin B.
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Nieves, Jose M. Ramos
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Monnard, Cathriona R.
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Thway-Tint, Mya
d759e812-61cc-4d4e-b9a2-e02c3b308c45
Nield, Heidi
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Barton, Sheila J.
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El-Heis, Sarah
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Tham, Elizabeth H.
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Godfrey, Keith M.
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Chan, Shiao-Yng
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Cutfield, Wayne S.
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NiPPeR Study Group
Lyons-Reid, Jaz
0cf7e7b8-ffe9-4ef5-ba37-56b571eaa926
Derraik, José G.B.
006119b3-8592-4cf9-975d-1bd34583f669
Ward, Leigh C.
68d08d29-e7dd-4ac5-b14c-0fdb9bab70d9
Kenealy, Timothy
c032e16b-65a8-4156-bc79-422f6c0e7079
Albert, Benjamin B.
c2bf4926-6214-421d-b187-91c83966effc
Nieves, Jose M. Ramos
bb0873e3-5f0a-437c-8f50-8560c4e5ba89
Monnard, Cathriona R.
7e35577b-d179-423d-b5a7-c386d290c661
Thway-Tint, Mya
d759e812-61cc-4d4e-b9a2-e02c3b308c45
Nield, Heidi
837b180c-0a9e-49ba-bc2e-a899ef761d34
Barton, Sheila J.
4f674382-ca0b-44ad-9670-e71a0b134ef0
El-Heis, Sarah
6d7d2e03-3d63-4510-8b7e-fcbe4653db13
Tham, Elizabeth H.
e22014ec-8242-478a-aafc-e4177164f814
Godfrey, Keith M.
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Chan, Shiao-Yng
3c9d8970-2cc4-430a-86a7-96f6029a5293
Cutfield, Wayne S.
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Lyons-Reid, Jaz, Derraik, José G.B., Ward, Leigh C., Kenealy, Timothy, Albert, Benjamin B., Nieves, Jose M. Ramos, Monnard, Cathriona R., Thway-Tint, Mya, Nield, Heidi, Barton, Sheila J., El-Heis, Sarah, Tham, Elizabeth H., Godfrey, Keith M., Chan, Shiao-Yng and Cutfield, Wayne S. , NiPPeR Study Group (2025) Infant body composition in a randomised trial of a maternal nutritional supplement during preconception and pregnancy. World Journal of Pediatrics, 21 (4), 361-371, [e1002888]. (doi:10.1007/s12519-025-00900-y).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: in a multinational randomized controlled trial, we previously showed that maternal supplementation with myo-inositol, probiotics, and micronutrients was associated with reduced incidence of rapid infant weight gain and high body mass index (BMI) at two years among offspring. It was unclear whether these differences in weight gain and body mass were due to reduced adiposity. Therefore, we aimed to determine whether there were any differences in body composition.

Methods: body composition was measured using bioelectrical impedance spectroscopy at six weeks, six months, one year, and two years among offspring born to mothers who received a nutritional intervention (n = 268) or control (n = 264) supplement preconception and during pregnancy.

Results: there were no group-level differences in body composition, except at two years, when fat-free mass was greater among control offspring [adjusted mean difference (aMD) 0.14 kg, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.03, 0.25, P = 0.012]. However, there were no differences in mean percentage fat mass (%FM) at any time. In both groups, rapid weight gain [Δ weight > 0.67 standard deviation (SD) from birth to one year] was associated with greater %FM (aMD 2.0% at six months, 2.0% at one year, 1.4% at two years) compared with those who did not have rapid weight gain. Likewise, high BMI (≥ 95 percentile) at two years was associated with greater %FM (aMD 2.5%).

Conclusions: a maternal nutritional intervention did not lead to differences in average offspring body composition in the first two years of life. However, fewer offspring from the supplemented group experienced rapid weight gain and high BMI, characterized by greater %FM.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 March 2025
Published date: 14 May 2025
Keywords: Adiposity, Bioelectrical impedance, Body weight, Randomized controlled trial

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502525
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502525
ISSN: 1708-8569
PURE UUID: a4ce0e27-75b5-4148-a074-d0b0a5f94f28
ORCID for Sheila J. Barton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4963-4242
ORCID for Sarah El-Heis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4277-7187
ORCID for Keith M. Godfrey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4643-0618

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Date deposited: 30 Jun 2025 17:01
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:12

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Contributors

Author: Jaz Lyons-Reid
Author: José G.B. Derraik
Author: Leigh C. Ward
Author: Timothy Kenealy
Author: Benjamin B. Albert
Author: Jose M. Ramos Nieves
Author: Cathriona R. Monnard
Author: Mya Thway-Tint
Author: Heidi Nield
Author: Sarah El-Heis ORCID iD
Author: Elizabeth H. Tham
Author: Shiao-Yng Chan
Author: Wayne S. Cutfield
Corporate Author: NiPPeR Study Group

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