Nutrients (Feb 2024)

Association between Maternal Birth Weight and Prevalence of Congenital Malformations in Offspring: The Japanese Environment and Children’s Study

  • Hirotaka Hamada,
  • Noriyuki Iwama,
  • Hasumi Tomita,
  • Kazuma Tagami,
  • Natsumi Kumagai,
  • Rie Kudo,
  • Hongxin Wang,
  • Seiya Izumi,
  • Zen Watanabe,
  • Mami Ishikuro,
  • Taku Obara,
  • Nozomi Tatsuta,
  • Hirohito Metoki,
  • Masatoshi Saito,
  • Chiharu Ota,
  • Shinichi Kuriyama,
  • Takahiro Arima,
  • Nobuo Yaegashi,
  • The Japan Environment and Children’s Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16040531
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. 531

Abstract

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Congenital malformations are functional and structural alterations in embryonic or foetal development resulting from a variety of factors including maternal health status. This study aimed to investigate the association between maternal birth weight (MBW) and the prevalence of congenital malformations in offspring using data from a nationwide birth cohort study in Japan including 103,060 pregnancies. A binary logistic regression model with adjustment for various covariates revealed that an MBW of <2500 g (low MBW) was associated with an increased risk of congenital heart disease (adjusted odds ratio: 1.388, [95% confidence interval: 1.075–1.792]), angioma (1.491 [1.079–2.059]), and inguinal hernia (1.746, [1.189–2.565]), while those with an MBW of ≥4000 g (high MBW) were associated with congenital anomalies of the urinary tract (2.194, [1.261–3.819]) and arrhythmia (1.775, [1.157–2.725]) compared with those with an MBW of 3000–3499 g. Low MBW was associated with cleft lip and/or palate (1.473, [1.052–2.064]), congenital heart disease (1.615, [1.119–2.332]), genital organs (1.648, [1.130–2.405]), hypospadias (1.804, [1.130–2.881]), and inguinal hernia (1.484, [1.189–1.851]) in male infants and CAKUT (1.619, [1.154–2.273]) in female infants, whereas high MBW was associated with congenital heart disease (1.745, [1.058–2.877]) and CAKUT (2.470, [1.350–4.517]) in male infants. The present study is the first to demonstrate a link between MBW and congenital malformations in Japanese children. While these results must be interpreted with caution, MBW should be considered a major predictor of congenital malformation risk.

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