Clinical Epidemiology (Mar 2022)
Interpregnancy Weight Change Among Mothers of a Child with a Major Congenital Anomaly: A Danish Nationwide Cohort Study
Abstract
Eyal Cohen,1– 3 Péter Szentkúti,4 Erzsébet Horváth-Puhó,4 Hilary K Brown,3,5 Sonia M Grandi,2 Henrik Toft Sørensen,4,6 Joel G Ray2,3,7 1Department of Pediatrics and Edwin S.H. Leong Centre for Healthy Children, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 2Child Health Evaluative Sciences, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 3Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 4Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark; 5Department of Health & Society, University of Toronto Scarborough; 6Clinical Excellence Research Center, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA; 7St.Michael’s Hospital Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaCorrespondence: Eyal Cohen, Department of Pediatrics and Edwin S.H. Leong Centre for Healthy Children, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Tel +1 416-813-7654, Email [email protected]: The mother of an infant with a major congenital anomaly is at a higher risk of premature cardiometabolic disease, possibly from chronic caregiver stress and distraction from self-care, including maintaining a healthy lifestyle and body weight.Objective: To compare the interpregnancy weight gain in women whose first infant had a major congenital anomaly vs those without an affected child.Methods: Multivariable linear regression compared women whose infant had an anomaly vs those whose infant did not, adjusting for interpregnancy time interval, demographics, smoking and health status at the first pregnancy.Results: Of the 199,536 women who had two consecutive singleton births, 4035 (2.0%) had a child with an anomaly at the first birth. The mean (SD) maternal BMI at the start of the first pregnancy was 24.1 (4.7) and 23.7 (4.4) kg/m2 in women with, and without, an anomaly-affected newborn. By the start of the second pregnancy, 3 years later, they had gained a mean (SD) of 2.2 (5.5) and 1.8 (5.2) kg, respectively – an adjusted absolute higher gain of 0.26 kg (95% CI 0.10 to 0.42) in women with an anomaly-affected first-born infant compared to those with an unaffected pregnancy. The adjusted interpregnancy weight gain difference was greatest in women whose first-born infant had a multi-organ anomaly at 0.59 kg (95% CI 0.02 to 1.16). The adjusted odds ratio of moving from a normal BMI category of 18.5– 24.9 kg/m2 in the first pregnancy, to an overweight or obese BMI category of 25+ kg/m2 in the second, was 1.18 (95% CI 1.06 to 1.32) comparing mothers with vs without an anomaly-affected child in the first pregnancy.Conclusion: Mothers of an infant with a major congenital anomaly have a modestly higher interpregnancy weight gain and tend to climb to a higher BMI category. The long-term implications of this greater weight trajectory require further study.Keywords: weight gain, congenital anomaly, inter-pregnancy, body mass index