The impact of prepregnancy body mass index on pregnancy and neonatal outcomes
Author:
Mackeen A. Dhanya1, Boyd Victoria E.1, Schuster Meike2, Young Amanda J.3, Gray Celia4, Angras Kajal1
Affiliation:
1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology , 2780 Geisinger Health System , Danville , PA , USA 2. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology , 389402 Jefferson Health-Abington , Abington , PA , USA 3. Department of Population Health Sciences , 2780 Biostatistics Core, Geisinger Health System , Danville , PA , USA 4. Department of Phenomic Analytics and Clinical Data Core , 2780 Geisinger Health System , Danville , PA , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Context
The obesity epidemic in the United States is continuing to worsen. Obesity is a known risk factor for pregnancy morbidity. However, many studies use the patient’s body mass index (BMI) at the time of delivery, do not stratify by class of obesity, or utilize billing codes as the basis of their study, which are noted to be inaccurate.
Objectives
This study aims to investigate the prepregnancy BMI class specific risks for pregnancy and neonatal complications based on a prepregnancy BMI class.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective cohort study of 40,256 pregnant women with 55,202 singleton births between October 16, 2007 and December 3, 2023. We assessed the risk of pregnancy and neonatal morbidity based on the maternal prepregnancy BMI category. The primary outcome was composite maternal morbidity, including hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (i.e., gestational hypertension [GHTN] and preeclampsia), and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), adjusted for pregestational diabetes mellitus and chronic hypertension (cHTN). Secondary maternal outcomes included preterm premature rupture of membranes (PPROM), preterm delivery (PTD<37 and <32 weeks), induction of labor (IOL), cesarean delivery (CD), and postpartum hemorrhage (PPH). Neonatal outcomes included a composite adverse outcome (including stillbirth, intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH), hypoglycemia, respiratory distress syndrome [RDS], APGAR [Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration] <7 at 5 min, and neonatal intensive care unit [NICU] admission), birthweight, fetal growth restriction (FGR), and macrosomia.
Results
Composite maternal morbidity (odds ratio [OR] 4.40, confidence interval [CI] 3.70–5.22 for class III obesity [BMI≥40.0 kg/m2] compared with normal BMI), hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP), GDM, PTD, IOL, CD, PPH, neonatal composite morbidity, hypoglycemia, RDS, APGAR<7 at 5 min, NICU admission, and macrosomia showed a significant increasing test of trend among BMI classes. Increased BMI was protective for FGR.
Conclusions
Our data provides BMI-class specific odds ratios (ORs) for adverse pregnancy outcomes. Increased BMI class significantly increases the risk of HDP, GDM, IOL, CD, composite adverse neonatal outcomes, and macrosomia, and decreases the risk of FGR. Attaining a healthier BMI category prior to conception may lower pregnancy morbidity.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Reference33 articles.
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