| Literature DB >> 30001386 |
Reyna Sámano1, Gabriela Chico-Barba1,2, Hugo Martínez-Rojano3,4, Estela Godínez1, Ana Lilia Rodríguez-Ventura1, Gabriela Ávila-Koury5, Karen Aguilar-Sánchez6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Institute of Medicine gestational weight gain recommendations are based on body mass index (BMI) status using adult cut-off points for women of all ages, even though adolescents have specific criteria, like WHO and CDC, so adolescents can receive inadequate weight gain recommendations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30001386 PMCID: PMC6053897 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Body mass index categories according to three different criteria.
| WHO | CDC | IOM | |
|---|---|---|---|
| <3rd | <5th | <18.5 | |
| 3rd-<85th | 5th-<85th | 18.5–24.9 | |
| 85th-<97th | 85th-<95th | 25.0–29.9 | |
| ≥97th | ≥95th | ≥30.0 |
a BMI Percentiles for sex and age, WHO [6]
b BMI Percentiles for sex and age, CDC [7]
c BMI for adults (kg/m2), IOM [3]
Characteristics of the studied population (n = 601).
| Variable | n (%) |
|---|---|
| None | 10 (1.7) |
| Elementary school | 145 (24.1) |
| Junior high | 369 (61.4) |
| High school | 74 (12.3) |
| College | 3 (0.5) |
| Home duties | 461 (76.7) |
| Student | 109 (18.2) |
| Employed | 15 (2.5) |
| Self-employed | 16 (2.6) |
| Socioeconomic status | |
| Low | 260 (43.3) |
| Medium | 237 (39.4) |
| High | 104 (17.3) |
| First trimester | 205 (34.1) |
| Second trimester | 332 (55.2) |
| Third trimester | 64 (10.6) |
| C-section | 279 (46.4) |
| Weight gain (kg) | 12.3 (±5.9) |
| Gestagional Age (wk) | 38 (±1.7) |
| Birth Weight (kg) | 2904 (±466) |
| Birth Length (cm) | 48.6 (±2.6) |
| Low birth weight (<2500g) | 95 (15.8) |
| Preterm (<37 wk) | 62 (10.3) |
| Small for gestational age | 104 (17.3) |
a Mean (± Standard Deviation)
Fig 1Pre-pregnancy BMI according to three different criteria.
Pre-pregnancy BMI classification disparity between adolescent vs adult categories.
| Adolescent Pre-pregnancy BMI | Adult | All | 12–15 y | 16–19 y | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IOM categories | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
| Low (correctly classified) | 30 (100.0) | 10 (100.0) | 20 (100.0) | ||
| Normal (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Overweight (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Obese (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Low (disparity) | 68 (15.4) | 32 (18.6) | 36 (13.4) | ||
| Normal (correctly classified) | 373 (84.6) | 140 (81.4) | 233 (86.6) | ||
| Overweight (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Obese (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Low (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Normal (disparity) | 52 (75.4) | 27 (100.00) | 25 (59.5) | ||
| Overweight (correctly classified) | 17 (24.6) | 0 | 17 (40.5) | ||
| Obese (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Low (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Normal (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Overweight (disparity) | 51 (83.6) | 24 (92.3) | 27 (77.1) | ||
| Obese (correctly classified) | 10 (16.4) | 2(7.7) | 8 (22.9) | ||
| Low (correctly classified) | 38 (100.0) | 10 (100.0) | 28 (100.0) | ||
| Normal (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Overweight (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Obese (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Low (disparity) | 60 (12.7) | 32 (16.9) | 28 (9.9) | ||
| Normal (correctly classified) | 411 (87.3) | 157 (83.1) | 254 (90.1) | ||
| Overweight (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Obese (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Low (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Normal (disparity) | 14 (19.4) | 10 (40.0) | 4 (8.5) | ||
| Overweight (correctly classified) | 58 (80.6) | 15 (60.0) | 43 (91.5) | ||
| Obese (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Low (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Normal (disparity) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Overweight (disparity) | 10 (50.0) | 9 (81.8) | 1 (11.1) | ||
| Obese (correctly classified) | 10 (50.0) | 2 (18.2) | 8 (88.9) | ||
a Percentages presented by column and WHO category. WHO vs IOM, Kappa = 0.379, p<0.01
b Percentages presented by column and CDC category. CDC vs IOM, Kappa = 0.668, p<0.01
Fig 2Gestational weight gain according to IOM recommendation, using three different criteria of pre-pregnancy BMI classification.
Gestational weight gain according to IOM recommendation, by pre-pregnancy BMI classification.
| Pre-pregnancy BMI classification | Low GWG | Adequate GWG | High GWG | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (row %) | n (row %) | n (row %) | ||
| <0.01 | ||||
| 11 (36.7) | 12 (40.0) | 7 (23.3) | ||
| 184 (41.7) | 163 (37.0) | 94 (21.3) | ||
| 12 (17.4) | 24 (34.8) | 33 (47.8) | ||
| 18 (29.5) | 11 (18.0) | 32 (52.5) | ||
| <0.01 | ||||
| 19 (50.0) | 12 (31.6) | 7 (18.4) | ||
| 198 (42.0) | 171 (36.3) | 102 (21.7) | ||
| 18 (25.0) | 27 (37.5) | 27 (37.5) | ||
| 6 (30.0) | 2 (10.0) | 12 (60.0) | ||
| 0.005 | ||||
| 45 (45.9) | 33 (33.7) | 20 (20.4) | ||
| 187 (44.0) | 152 (35.8) | 86 (20.2) | ||
| 18 (26.5) | 24 (35.3) | 26 (38.2) | ||
| 4 (40.0) | 1 (10.0) | 5 (50.0) |
Percentages presented per rows.
Fig 3Distribution (%) of neonatal outcomes in adolescents with a pre-pregnancy BMI correctly classified compared to those with disparity classification, according to different criteria of pre-pregnancy BMI classification.
Associations between neonatal outcomes and gestational weight gain using pre-pregnancy BMI.
| Pre-pregnancy BMI classification | GWG | LBW (n = 95) | Preterm (n = 62) | SGA (n = 153) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| aOR (IC95%) | aOR (IC95%) | aOR (IC95%) | ||
| Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | ||
| 1.47 (0.77–2.78) | 1.76 (0.83–3.69) | 1.04 (0.57–1.90) | ||
| 1.91 (1.03–3.53) | 1.56 (0.74–3.27) | 0.60 (0.34–1.05) | ||
| Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | ||
| 1.73 (0.89–3.38) | 2.65 (1.16–6.08) | 0.83 (0.45–1.53) | ||
| 2.10 (1.10–4.01) | 2.15 (0.93–4.96) | 0.57 (0.32–1.02) | ||
| Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | ||
| 2.10 (1.02–4.32) | 2.61 (1.09–6.27) | 0.71 (0.37–1.35) | ||
| 2.66 (1.32–5.33) | 2.61 (1.10–6.19) | 0.52 (0.28–0.96) |
GWG: Gestational weight gain; LBW: Low birth weight; SGA: Small for gestational age; aOR: Adjusted Odds Ratio for pre-pregnancy BMI, maternal age and socioeconomic status; CI: Confidence interval.