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Impact of maternal prepregnancy body mass index on neonatal outcomes following extremely preterm birth

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Version 2 2025-02-27, 16:07
Version 1 2024-12-20, 16:39
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posted on 2025-02-27, 16:07 authored by Charlotte Girard, Jennifer Zeitlin, Neil Marlow, Mikael Norman, Fredrik Serenius, Elizabeth Draper, Samantha JohnsonSamantha Johnson, Valeria Benhammou, Karin Kallen, Stef van Buren, Pierre-Yves Ancel, Andrei Morgan

Objective

Extremes of prepregnancy maternal BMI increase neonatal mortality and morbidity at term. They also increase the risk of extremely preterm (EP, i.e., <27 weeks' gestational age) births. However, the association between maternal BMI and outcomes for EP babies is poorly understood.


Methods

We used a cross-country design, bringing together the following three population-based, prospective, national EP birth cohorts: EXPRESS (Sweden, 2004–2007); EPICure 2 (UK, 2006); and EPIPAGE 2 (France, 2011). We included all singleton births at 22 to 26 weeks' gestational age with a live fetus at maternal hospital admission. Our exposure was maternal prepregnancy BMI, i.e., underweight, reference, overweight, or obesity. Odds ratios (OR) for survival without severe neonatal morbidity to hospital discharge according to maternal BMI were calculated using logistic regression.


Results

A total of 1396 babies were born to mothers in the reference group, 140 to those with underweight, 719 to those with overweight, 556 to those with obesity, and 445 to those with missing BMI information. There was no difference in survival without major neonatal morbidity (reference, 22%; underweight, 26%, OR, 1.31, 95% CI: 0.82–2.08; overweight, 23%, OR, 1.00, 95% CI: 0.77–1.29; obesity, 19%, OR, 0.94, 95% CI: 0.70–1.25).


Conclusions

No associations were seen between maternal BMI and outcomes for EP babies.


Funding

EPICure: population-based studies of survival and later health status of infants of 25 weeks gestation or less

Medical Research Council

Find out more...

Société Française de Médecine Périnatale, Bourse de recherche

Agence Nationale de la Recherche. Grant Number: ANR-­11-­EQPX-­0 038

Ministry for Health, France. Grant Number: ResearchScholarship

Fondation de France. Grant Number: 00050329

Uppsala Regional Research Council. Grant Number: RFR-­10324

Vetenskapsrådet. Grant Numbers: 2006-­3855, 2009-­ 4250

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Obesity

Publisher

Wiley

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-02-27

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Samantha Johnson

Deposit date

2024-12-02

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