体重は妊娠において重要 – 出生国に関係なく(Body weight is an important health factor in pregnancy – regardless of country of birth)

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2024-10-03 リンショーピング大学

妊娠中の体重は、出生国に関係なく重要な健康要因であり、過体重は妊娠や出産における合併症の大きな要因です。スウェーデンで行われた研究によると、妊娠糖尿病などの合併症の約半数は、妊娠時に適正体重であれば予防可能です。特に移住女性では、体重に関連した健康リスクが高いことが確認されました。健康な体重を促進する介入が、全ての女性に対して合併症予防に役立つと結論づけられています。

<関連情報>

母親の出生地域間の過体重と肥満に起因する有害な妊娠転帰:スウェーデンの集団ベースのコホート研究 Adverse pregnancy outcomes attributable to overweight and obesity across maternal birth regions: a Swedish population-based cohort study

Maryam Shirvanifar, MSc∙ Viktor H Ahlqvist, PhD∙ Michael Lundberg, MPH∙ Kyriaki Kosidou, PhD∙ Ángel Herraiz-Adillo, PhD∙ Daniel Berglind, PhD∙ et al.
The Lancet Public Health  Published: October 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(24)00188-9

体重は妊娠において重要 – 出生国に関係なく(Body weight is an important health factor in pregnancy – regardless of country of birth)

Summary

Background
Whether there are differences in the contribution of overweight and obesity to adverse pregnancy outcomes between migrant and non-migrant women in high-income countries, which might increase health inequalities, remains unclear. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to estimate the contribution (including the proportion and number of attributable cases) of overweight and obesity to a wide range of adverse pregnancy outcomes in Swedish-born and migrant women.

Methods
This population-based cohort study used nationwide population registries in Sweden. All outcomes and covariates were collected from the Medical Birth Register (delivery and maternal characteristics), National Patient Register (inpatient and specialised outpatient care), the Cause of Death Register (all deaths in Sweden), the Longitudinal Integrated Database for Health Insurance and Labour Market Studies (socioeconomic data), and the Total Population Register (maternal birth country data). Women with missing records of BMI at the first antenatal visit, country of birth, or covariates, were excluded from the study. BMI was measured during the first antenatal visit. Maternal country of birth was categorised into Sweden and seven super-regions. The proportion (ie, population attributable fractions [PAFs]) and the number of adverse pregnancy outcomes attributable to overweight and obesity were calculated, adjusting for maternal age, gestational age at first antenatal visit, maternal parity, smoking status, maternal somatic conditions, child’s sex, socioeconomic and demographic variables.

Findings
We identified 2 228 416 singleton pregnancies between Jan 1, 2000, and Dec 31, 2020 of 1 245 273 women. 254 778 (11·4%) pregnancies with missing records of BMI at the first antenatal visit, country of birth, or covariates were excluded, which resulted in a final analytical cohort of 1 973 638 pregnancies carried by 1 164 783 women. The overall mean maternal age of the study population was 30·8 years (SD 5·1). As estimated by PAFs, overweight and obesity contributed to a large proportion of adverse pregnancy outcomes: gestational diabetes (52·1% [95% CI 51·0–53·2]), large-for-gestational age (36·9% [36·2–37·6]), pre-eclampsia (26·5% [25·7–27·3]), low Apgar score (14·7% [13·5–15·9]), infant mortality (12·7% [9·8–15·7]), severe maternal morbidity (henceforth referred to as a near-miss event; 8·5% [6·0–11·0]), and preterm birth (5·0% [4·4–5·7]) in the total study population. PAFs varied between maternal birth regions.

Interpretation
Interventions to reduce overweight and obesity have the potential to mitigate the burden of adverse pregnancy outcomes and possibly reduce inequalities in reproductive health. Therefore, public health practice and policy should prioritise efforts to prevent overweight and obesity among women of childbearing age.

Funding
Swedish Research Council.

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