| Literature DB >> 33092575 |
Sorayya Kheirouri1, Mohammad Alizadeh2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Abnormal gestational weight gain (GWG) is a prenatal complication that may contribute to long-term behavioral and neurodevelopmental differences in offspring. This systematic review summarizes research on the association between maternal GWG and risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in offspring.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Body mass index; Genetic susceptibility; Gestational weight gain; Intellectual disability
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33092575 PMCID: PMC7579946 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-020-03324-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Association between gestational weight gain and risk of autism spectrum disorders: Method of the database search strategy using PubMed, SCOPUS, Google Scholar and Embase
| Database (Search conducted up to June 27, 2020) | Search termsa | Number of studies searched |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed | #1 (((gestational weight gain [Title/Abstract]) OR (pregnancy weight gain [Title/Abstract])) OR (weight gain in pregnancy[Title/Abstract])) OR (weight gain during pregnancy[Title/Abstract]) | 4323 |
| #2 (((autism[Title/Abstract]) OR (ASD[Title/Abstract])) OR (developmental delay[Title/Abstract])) OR (developmental disorder[Title/Abstract]) | 64,806 | |
| #1 combined with #2 ((((gestational weight gain[Title/Abstract]) OR (pregnancy weight gain[Title/Abstract])) OR (weight gain in pregnancy[Title/Abstract])) OR (weight gain during pregnancy[Title/Abstract])) AND ((((autism[Title/Abstract]) OR (ASD[Title/Abstract])) OR (developmental delay[Title/Abstract])) OR (developmental disorder[Title/Abstract])) | 15 | |
| SCOPUS | (TITLE-ABS-KEY (“gestational weight gain”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“pregnancy weight gain”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“weight gain in pregnancy”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“weight gain during pregnancy”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (“autism”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“ASD”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“developmental delay”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“developmental disorder”)) AND DOCTYPE (ar) | 24 |
| Google Scholar | allintitle: “autism” OR “ASD” OR “developmental delay” OR “developmental disorder” “weight gain” | 24 |
| with at least one of the words: “autism” OR “ASD” OR “developmental delay” OR “developmental disorder” | ||
| with the exact phrase: weight gain | ||
| Embase | #1 ‘gestational weight gain’/exp. OR ‘pregnancy weight gain’/exp. OR ‘weight gain in pregnancy’ OR ‘weight gain during pregnancy’ | 4356 |
| #2 ‘autism’/exp. OR ‘asd’/exp. OR ‘developmental delay’/exp. OR ‘developmental disorder’/exp. | 139,670 | |
| #1 AND #2 | 28 | |
| Cochrane library | #1 (“gestational weight gain”):ti,ab,kw OR (“pregnancy weight gain”):ti,ab,kw OR (“weight gain in pregnancy”):ti,ab,kw OR (“weight gain during pregnancy”):ti,ab,kw | 791 |
| #2 (“autism”):ti,ab,kw OR (“autism spectrum disorder”):ti,ab,kw OR (“ASD”):ti,ab,kw OR (“developmental delay”):ti,ab,kw OR (“developmental disorder”):ti,ab,kw | 4481 | |
| #1 AND #2 | 1 | |
| Total | 92 |
aSearches were limited to original articles, and studies published in the English language using the appropriate filters and/or search terms depending on the database
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the study
Characteristics and extracted data of the included studies
| Author/ year | Country | Type of study | Number of children/Type of birth | Age of children (year) | Covariates adjusted | GWG definition | ASD definition | Findings OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilder et al./2013 [ | Utah | ADDM Network cohort (Population-based) | ASD, | 8 | Intellectual disability, maternal and paternal age and education, parity, pre-pregnancy BMI, gestational age, gender, birth year | Continuous (based on a 5-lb increase) | DSM-IV-TR | Each 5 pounds of weight gained was significantly associated with ASD risk [1.10 (1.03–1.17)]. |
| Control, | ||||||||
| A 2 SD increase in GWG was associated with risk of ASD (25.00 lb). | ||||||||
| Pre-pregnancy BMI was not associated with ASD. | ||||||||
| Bilder et al./2013 [ | Utah | Genetics Study cohort (research-based) | ASD, | 8 | Intellectual disability, maternal and paternal age and education, parity, pre-pregnancy BMI, gestational age, gender, birth year | Continuous (based on a 5-lb increase) | ADI-R and ADOS-G | Each 5 pounds of weight gained was significantly associated with ASD risk [1.17 (1.01–1.35)]. |
| Unaffected siblings, | ||||||||
| A 2 SD increase in GWG was associated with risk of ASD (24.74 lb). | ||||||||
| Pre-pregnancy BMI was not associated with ASD. | ||||||||
| Burstyn et al./2010 [ | Canada | Cohort | 218,890/Singleton births | 4–10 | Maternal age, weight, pre-pregnancy and gestational diabetes, bleeding, smoking, parity and socio-economic status, child’s birth year, gestational age, gender | Poor GWG: < 0.5 kg/week (26–36 weeks) | ICD-9 | Poor weight gain (26–36 weeks, < 0.5 kg/week) was not associated with increased risk of ASD [0.95 (0.57–1.59)]. |
| Low maternal pre-pregnancy weight (< 45 kg) was associated with increased risk of ASD [RR: 2.15 (1.20–3.85)]. | ||||||||
| Maternal weight > 91 kg was not associated with increased risk of ASD [1.18 (0.96–1.44)]. | ||||||||
| Dodds et al./2011 [ | Canada | Retrospective, longitudinal Cohort | Total births: | 1–17 | Year of birth, genetic susceptibility (sibling with ASD, maternal psychiatric disorders, maternal neurological illness), major CNS anomaly, breastfeeding at discharge, infant sex, type of labour, maternal conditions (pulmonary disease, heart disease, renal disease and anemia), pre-pregnancy weight, gestational age. | Excess GWG: ≥18 kg | ICD-9 or ICD-10 codes | GWG ≥ 18 kg in total sample [RR: 1.19 (1.02–1.39)] and in mothers of children with low genetic susceptibility [1.21 (1.03–1.43)] was associated with increased risk of autism. |
| Autism: | Poor GWG: < 7 kg | |||||||
| Inadequate GWG (< 7 kg) was not associated with the risk of autism. | ||||||||
| Pre-pregnancy weight ≥ 90 kg in total sample [1.58 (1.26–1.98)] and in mothers of children with low genetic susceptibility [1.69 (1.34–2.14)] was associated with increased risk of autism. | ||||||||
| Gardner et al./2015 [ | Sweden | Prospective cohort | Total children: | ≥ 4 | Maternal BMI, gestational age, infant sex, birth year, parity, maternal age, paternal age, maternal country of birth, socioeconomic status, parental psychiatric history, genetic susceptibility, intellectual disability. | Based on IOM guidelines | ICD-9, ICD-10, and DSM-IV codes | Both insufficient [1.17 (1.04–1.31)] and excessive GWG [1.12 (1.01–1.25)] were independently associated with ASD. |
| ASD: 6420/Singleton births | ||||||||
| Every 2.3 kg (5 lb) increase in GWG was associated with increased risk of autism [1.03 (1.00–1.06)]. | ||||||||
| Matched sibling analyses showed elevated risk of ASD with excessive GWG [1.48 (0.93–2.38)]. | ||||||||
| Maternal overweight/obesity was associated with increased risk of offspring ASD [25 ≤ BMI < 30: 1.31, (1.21–1.41); BMI ≥ 30: 1.94 (1.72–2.17)]. | ||||||||
| Shen et al./2018 [ | China | Case-control | Autism: | 2–9 | Child’s gender and age, parental age and family income | Based on Chinese GWG guidelines | DSM-IV-TR criteria | Excessive GWG was associated with autism risk in the entire sample [(1.327, 1.021–1.725)]. |
| Control: | ||||||||
| Excessive GWG increased the risk of autism in overweight/obese mothers [2.468 (1.102–5.526)]. | ||||||||
| Inadequate GWG was not associated with the risk of autism. | ||||||||
| Maternal pre-pregnancy BMI might not be independently associated with the risk of autism. | ||||||||
| Windham et al./2019 [ | USA | Case-control | ASD: | 2–5 | Pre-pregnancy BMI, maternal age, education, race/ethnicity, parity, smoking, intellectual disability, child sex | Based on IOM guidelines | SCQ score ≥ 11, ADI-R, ADOS | Maternal total GWG was higher in the ASD group than other groups. |
| SEED | Developmental delays: | |||||||
| Control: n = 776/Singleton births | Continuous model: 1.06 (1.02–1.10) | |||||||
| Exceeds IOM/ACOG recommendation: 1.29 (1.00–1.66) | ||||||||
| Exceeding clinically recommended GWG was significantly higher (51%) in ASD group than other groups. | ||||||||
| Associations of ASD with higher GWG were stronger in quintiles 4 and 5. | ||||||||
| Quintile 4 (35– ≤ 44 pounds): 1.52 (1.05–2.22) | ||||||||
| Quintile 5 (≥44 pounds): 1.58 (1.08–2.31) | ||||||||
| In the continuous model, each 5-pound increase of GWG was associated with6% increased odds of ASD. | ||||||||
| Insufficient GWG was not associated with risk of ASD. | ||||||||
| Maternal pre-pregnancy BMI was not associated with ASD. | ||||||||
| Xiang et al./2015 [ | USA | Retrospective longitudinal cohort | 322,323 children | A median of 5.5 years after birth | Birth year, maternal age, parity, gestational age, education, maternal race/ethnicity, household income, history of comorbidity (≥1 diagnosis of heart, lung, kidney, or liver disease; cancer), child sex | Continuous (per 4 kg) | ICD-9 codes 299.x or equivalent KPSC codes | GWG (per 4 kg) [HR: 1.67 (1.10–2.53)] and maternal pre-pregnancy BMI were modestly and positively associated with ASD risk. |
| ASD: |
ADDM Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring (ADDM); ASD autism spectrum disorders; BMI body mass index; CI confidence interval; IOM Institute of Medicine; GWG gestational weight gain; HR Hazard Ratio; OR Odds Ratio; SEED the Study to Explore Early Development; RR Relative Risk; ICD International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 9th revision; DSM-IV-TR Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition, text revision; ADOS-G Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-Generic; ADI-RAutism Diagnostic Inventory-Revised
Fig. 2A possible mechanistic model of GWG and ASD relationship. ASD, autism spectrum disorders; GWG, gestational weight gain