1. Gestational weight gain: Toward best practices in managing gestational weight gain in patients with obesity: Comparison of recommendations.
- Author
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Grandfils, Sebastien, Durand, Pauline, Hoge, Axelle, Seidel, Laurence, Emonts, Patrick, Paquot, Nicolas, and Philips, Jean Christophe
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WEIGHT gain , *WEIGHT loss , *CHILDHOOD obesity , *OBESITY , *PREMATURE labor - Abstract
• Obesity is a major public health issue in pregnancy. • There is a direct correlation between the severity of obesity and perinatal morbidity. • Gestational weight gain is a key parameter to address during pregnancy. • The IOM recommendations appear too permissive, and new standards should be proposed. In 2009, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) issued recommendations for gestational weight gain (GWG) based on body mass index (BMI). Several studies have challenged those recommendations for women with obesity, considering them too liberal and advising more limited weight gain – or even weight loss – during pregnancy to improve maternal and neonatal outcomes. Our aim was to study how gestational weight gain in women with obesity impacted maternal and fetal complications in the Belgian population. We did this by comparing the results from two groups of patients with obesity: those who met the 2009 IOM standards and those who satisfied the stricter recommendations suggested by other authors. This is a retrospective cohort study using data collected at the Centre d'Epidémiologie Périnatale (CEpiP) from obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) pregnant women with live singleton deliveries between 2010 and 2019 in Wallonia-Brussels Federation (n = 65,314). Compared to obese patients whose GWG satisfied the IOM standards, those with GWG meeting the stricter recommendations had lower rates of gestational hypertension (7.1 % vs. 10.1 %; p = 0.0059), cesarean section (22.1 % vs. 26.3 %; p = 0.0074), and macrosomia (12.0 % vs. 17.7 %; p < 0.0001). There was no significant difference in the rate of preterm delivery (6.9 % vs 5.8 %; p = 0.12) or small-for-gestational-age births (7.2 % vs. 6.2 %; p = 0.16). Gestational weight gain below that currently recommended by the IOM appears beneficial to the health of mothers with obesity and their children. These data, from our population, further challenge the standards proposed since 2009. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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