| Literature DB >> 23467680 |
Anne Karen Jenum1, Christine Sommer, Line Sletner, Kjersti Mørkrid, Anne Bærug, Annhild Mosdøl.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ethnic minorities in Europe have high susceptibility to type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and, in some groups, also cardiovascular disease (CVD). Pregnancy can be considered a stress test that predicts future morbidity patterns in women and that affects future health of the child.Entities:
Keywords: breastfeeding; cardiovascular disease; ethnicity; gestational diabetes; immigrants; obesity; pre-eclampsia; pregnancy; prenatal development; type 2 diabetes
Year: 2013 PMID: 23467680 PMCID: PMC3585772 DOI: 10.3402/fnr.v57i0.18889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Nutr Res ISSN: 1654-661X Impact factor: 3.894
Comparison of BMI in pregnant women between groups of Asian and African origin and the majority population in European countries
| Author, year, (reference number) | Study design | Study population | Variable | Ethnic groups | n | Results | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Djelantik et al. 2012 ( | Community-based cohort study | Pregnant women living in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, January 2003–March 2004 | Pre-pregnant BMI (pBMI) | pBMI 25–30 | pBMI>30 | Self-reported height and weight. | ||
| Jenum et al. 2012 ( | Population-based cohort study | Healthy, pregnant women from three city district of Oslo, Norway, May 2008–2010 | Pre-pregnant BMI (pBMI) | pBMI. Mean (SD) | Self-reported pre-pregnant weight, measured height at first visit. | |||
| Hestlehurst et al. 2010 ( | Database study | Women attending 37 maternity units in UK, 1989–2007 | Early pregnant BMI | BMI 25–29.9 | BMI>30 | Maternal height and weight at initial GP appointment, adjusted for gestational age. The study population was found to be nationally representative. | ||
| Ochsenbein-Kölble et al. 2007 ( | Prospective cross-sectional study | Nulliparous women attending an obstetric prenatal outpatient clinic, Zürich, Switzerland, January 1996–February 2000 | Pre-pregnant BMI (pBMI) | pBMI. Mean (SD) | Self-reported pre-pregnant weight. Mean pBMI sign different in Asians, but not in Blacks, compared to Caucasians. | |||
| Loetscher et al. 2007 ( | Retrospective cohort study | Nulliparous women attending a prenatal outpatient clinic, Zürich, Switzerland, 1999–2003 | Pre-pregnant BMI (pBMI) | pBMI>25 | pBMI>30 | Self-reported pre-pregnant weight, measured height at first visit. | ||
| Hestlehurst et al. 2006 ( | Database study | Women attending a maternity unit, Middlesbrough, UK, 1990–2004 | Early pregnant BMI | BMI 25–29.9 | BMI>30 | Maternal height and weight at initial GP appointment, adjusted for gestational age. Ethnicity was not significantly associated with obesity in models adjusted for age, parity, employment, deprivation, and marital status. | ||
Results from women of other European and American nationalities not reported in this table.
Comparison of gestational weight gain and post-partum weight retention between groups of Asian and African origin and the majority population in European countries
| Author, year, (reference number) | Study design | Study population | Variable | Groups by ethnicity | n | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ochsenbein-Kölble et al. 2007 ( | Prospective cross-sectional study | Nulliparous women attending an obstetric prenatal outpatient clinic, Zürich, Switzerland, January 1996–February 2000 | BMI and weight gain centile curves during the pregnancy | N | 4,034 | Asians and Blacks had significantly lower weight gain than Caucasians over the whole pregnancy period ( | Self-reported pre-pregnant weight. Weight measured at each antenatal visit. |
| Loetscher et al. 2007 ( | Retrospective cohort study | Nulliparous women attending a prenatal outpatient clinic, Zürich, Switzerland, 1999–2003 | Gestational weight gain | Mean (SD) net weight gain | Self-reported pre-pregnant weight. Weight at delivery (within 1 week prior to delivery) measured at the hospital | ||
| van Poppel et al. 2012 ( | Prospective cohort study | Pregnant women attending antenatal care in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, January 2003–March 2004 | Weight retention 3–5 months post-partum | Weight retention>5 kg | Self-reported pre-pregnant weight and weight 3–5 months post-partum. |
Results from women of other European and American nationalities not reported in this table.
Comparison of the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) between groups of Asian and African origin and the majority population in European countries
| Author, year, (reference number) | Study design | Study population | Variable | Ethnic groups | n | Results | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jenum et al. 2012 ( | Population-based cohort study | Healthy, pregnant women, living in three city district of Oslo, Norway, 2008–2010 | GDM with WHO criteria | Crude prevalence | AOR | |||
| GDM with modified IADPSG criteria (no 1-h glucose values) | Crude prevalence | AOR | ||||||
| Khalil et al. 2012 ( | Cohort study | Pregnant women in 3 hospitals in South England, UK | Diagnosis with modified WHO criteria (fasting plasma glucose≥6.0 mmol/l) | 1,355 cases (1.8%) | Crude OR | Data collected as part of routine antenatal care. GDM screening by 2-step approach | ||
| Makgoba et al. 2011 ( | Retrospective study | Pregnant women in 15 maternity units in North West London, UK, 1988–2000 | GDM criteria not specified. | Crude prevalence | Crude OR | Advancing maternal age and BMI was associated with significantly higher risk for risk for GDM in South Asian and Black African women than in White European | ||
Figures calculated based on number of cases reported in the paper.
Figures in subgroups not reported.
For the BMI group: 18.5–24.9.
Comparison of the risk of pre-eclampsia for groups of Asian and African origin and the majority population in European countries
| Author, year, (reference number) | Study design | Study population | Variable | Ethnic groups | n | Results | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khalil et al. 2012 ( | Prospective cohort study | Pregnant women in 3 hospitals in South England, UK | Pre-eclampsia, defined affording to International Society for the Study of Hypertension in Pregnancy (ISSHP) | 1,698 cases (2.3%) | Unadjusted OR | Data collected as part of routine antenatal care. Number of cases in subgroups not reported. Significantly higher OR for pre-eclampsia in Afro-Caribbean and South Asian than Caucasian women | ||
| Bouthoorn et al. 2012 ( | Population-based prospective cohort study | Pregnant women, The Generation R Study, Rotterdam, the Netherlands, 2002–2006 | Pre-eclampsia, defined according to ISSHP | 120 cases (2.1%) | Unadjusted OR | 4–11% missing values for hypertensive pregnancy complications in ethnic groups | ||
Figures calculated based on number of cases reported in the paper.
Figures in subgroups not reported.
Results for the Surinamese, who are reported to have at least partly African (the Creoles) and Indian (the Hindustanis) ancestral origin are given in this table, but not for women from the Antilles.
Comparison of differences in birth weight for groups of Asian and African origin and the majority population in European countries
| Author, year, (reference number) | Study design | Study population | Variable | Ethnic groups | n | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goedhart, 2008 ( | Population-based cohort study | Singleton, live births born in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Jan 2003–March 2004. | Birth weight | Mean birth weight | All ethnic groups had lower mean birth weight for gestational age compared with the native Dutch. | ||
| Kelly et al. 2008 ( | Population-based cohort study | A random sample of all births in England and Wales, 2000–2001. | Birth weight | Mean birth weight | Bangladeshi neonates were on average 327 g lighter than British whites. Indians 344 g, Pakistanis 306 g, and Black African 73 g lighter. | ||
| Moser et al. 2008 ( | Population-based register study | All live births in England and Wales, UK, 2005 | Birth weight | Mean birth weight | |||
| Harding, 2006 ( | Population-based register study | Hospital records from two municipalities in Lisbon, Portugal, July 2001–June 2002 | Birth weight | Mean birth weight | Term neonates of foreign-born African mothers were slightly heavier than White Portuguese neonates, but this difference disappeared after basic adjustments. | ||
| Drooger, 2005 ( | Population -based cohort study | ‘The Generation R study’ (low-risk pregnancies), Rotterdam, the Netherlands (data collection from 2002). | Estimated foetal weight (by ultrasound at GW 40) | Mean birth weight | Differences not significant in Moroccan neonates or in Turkish neonates after adjustments for maternal height/weight, parity, and gender. | ||
| Harding, 2005 ( | Population-based register study | National birth data from Portugal 1995–2002, for two ethnic groups. | Birth weight | Mean birth weight | No difference in mean birth weight in the two groups. | ||
| Vahratian, 2004 ( | Population-based register study | Births at three public hospital prenatal clinics in Belgium, May 1994–April 1995. | Birth weight | Mean birth weight | Neonates born by North African immigrants were 154 g heavier than native Belgians, but this difference disappeared when adjusting for gestational age. | ||
| Harding, 2004 ( | Population-based register study | One percent of all births in England and Wales, 1983–2000. | Birth weight | Mean birth weight | All groups had significantly lower mean birth weight, compared with British White neonates. After adjustments for maternal factors, mean birth weights were similar in neonates born by UK-born and foreign-born mothers within these ethnic groups. | ||
| Vangen, 2002 ( | Population-based register study | All births in Norway from 1980–1995 for four ethnic groups. | Birth weight | Neonates born by Pakistani mothers were 286 g lighter, Vietnamese 328 g lighter, and North African 29 g heavier than neonates born by Norwegian mothers. |
Results from women of other European and American nationalities not reported in this table.
Search terms with regard to ethnic differences in the pre-pregnant BMI, gestational weight gain, post-partum weight retention, prevalence of gestational diabetes mellitus, prevalence of pre-eclampsia, and birth weight and body composition of neonates.
| Search terms | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Table No, outcome | Main area | Demarcations | Joint search string | |
| 1: pre-pregnant weight | Body constitution | (Pregnant OR pregnancy) | Europe | (Human migration OR Africa OR Asia OR ethnic OR ethnicity OR race OR racial OR immigrant OR immigrants OR minority OR minorities OR ethnology) |
| 2: gestational weight gain | Weight gain | (Pregnant OR pregnancy) | Europe | |
| 2: post-partum weight retention | Postpartum weight retention | (Pregnant OR pregnancy) | Europe | |
| 3: gestational diabetes mellitus | Diabetes, gestational | (Pregnant OR pregnancy) | Europe | |
| 4: pre-eclampsia | Pre-eclampsia | (Pregnant OR pregnancy) | Europe | |
| 5: birth weight | (Birth weight OR birth weight OR body composition OR fat OR lean OR thin) | (Newborn OR infant OR neonatal) | Europe | (Ethnology OR ethnic OR ethnicity OR race OR racial OR minorities OR groups, minority) |
Filters: 10 years, English.