Janne Boone-Heinonen1, Frances M Biel2, Nicole E Marshall3, Jonathan M Snowden4. 1. Oregon Health & Science University, School of Public Health, Portland, OR. Electronic address: boonej@ohsu.edu. 2. Oregon Health & Science University, School of Public Health, Portland, OR. 3. Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Portland, OR. 4. Oregon Health & Science University, School of Public Health, Portland, OR; Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Portland, OR.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To estimate racial/ethnic-stratified effects of maternal prepregnancy BMI on size for gestational age at birth, by comparing siblings within families. METHODS: This study examined linked vital statistics and patient discharge data from 580,960 infants born to 278,770 women in the State of California (2007-2012). To control for family-level confounding, we used fixed effects multinomial regression, modeling size for gestational age (small [SGA], appropriate, large [LGA]) as a function of maternal BMI (underweight, normal weight, overweight, obesity class I, II, III) and time-varying covariates. We conducted overall and race/ethnicity-stratified (non-Hispanic white, black, Asian; Hispanic) analyses. For comparison, we fit analogous random effects models, which do not control for family-level confounding. RESULTS: In fixed effects models, maternal BMI was most strongly associated with LGA in non-Hispanic white women, reaching 6.7 times greater for class III obesity (OR [95% CI]: 6.7 [5.1, 8.7]); and weakest in black women (OR [95% CI]: 3.0 [1.5, 5.7]). Associations with SGA were similar across race/ethnicity. Compared with random effects estimates, fixed effects were most attenuated for LGA associations among racial/ethnic minority women. CONCLUSIONS: Maternal prepregnancy BMI was differentially associated with size for gestational age across racial/ethnic groups, with the strongest family-level confounding in racial/ethnic minority women.
PURPOSE: To estimate racial/ethnic-stratified effects of maternal prepregnancy BMI on size for gestational age at birth, by comparing siblings within families. METHODS: This study examined linked vital statistics and patient discharge data from 580,960 infants born to 278,770 women in the State of California (2007-2012). To control for family-level confounding, we used fixed effects multinomial regression, modeling size for gestational age (small [SGA], appropriate, large [LGA]) as a function of maternal BMI (underweight, normal weight, overweight, obesity class I, II, III) and time-varying covariates. We conducted overall and race/ethnicity-stratified (non-Hispanic white, black, Asian; Hispanic) analyses. For comparison, we fit analogous random effects models, which do not control for family-level confounding. RESULTS: In fixed effects models, maternal BMI was most strongly associated with LGA in non-Hispanic white women, reaching 6.7 times greater for class III obesity (OR [95% CI]: 6.7 [5.1, 8.7]); and weakest in black women (OR [95% CI]: 3.0 [1.5, 5.7]). Associations with SGA were similar across race/ethnicity. Compared with random effects estimates, fixed effects were most attenuated for LGA associations among racial/ethnic minority women. CONCLUSIONS: Maternal prepregnancy BMI was differentially associated with size for gestational age across racial/ethnic groups, with the strongest family-level confounding in racial/ethnic minority women.
Authors: Luchin F Wong; Aaron B Caughey; Sanae Nakagawa; Anjali J Kaimal; Susan H Tran; Yvonne W Cheng Journal: Am J Obstet Gynecol Date: 2008-08-23 Impact factor: 8.661
Authors: Joan F Carroll; Ana L Chiapa; Mayra Rodriquez; David R Phelps; Kathryn M Cardarelli; Jamboor K Vishwanatha; Sejong Bae; Roberto Cardarelli Journal: Obesity (Silver Spring) Date: 2008-01-17 Impact factor: 5.002