1. Prenatal Weight Change Trajectories and Perinatal Outcomes among Twin Gestations.
- Author
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Nichols, Amy, Haeri, Sina, Rudine, Anthony, Burns, Natalie, Rathouz, Paul, Hedderson, Monique, Abrams, Steven, Foster, Saralyn, Rickman, Rachel, McDonnold, Mollie, and Widen, Elizabeth
- Subjects
Humans ,Obesity ,Birth Weight ,Body Mass Index ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Linear Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Gestational Age ,Pregnancy ,Adult ,Infant ,Newborn ,Texas ,Female ,Male ,Overweight ,Pregnancy ,Twin ,Body-Weight Trajectory ,Gestational Weight Gain - Abstract
ObjectiveDespite an increase in twin pregnancies in recent decades, the Institute of Medicine twin weight gain recommendations remain provisional and provide no guidance for the pattern or timing of weight change. We sought to characterize gestational weight change trajectory patterns and examine associations with birth outcomes in a cohort of twin pregnancies.Study designPrenatal and delivery records were examined for 320 twin pregnancies from a maternal-fetal medicine practice in Austin, TX 2011-2019. Prenatal weights for those with >1 measured weight in the first trimester and ≥3 prenatal weights were included in analyses. Trajectories were estimated to 32 weeks (mean delivery: 33.7 ± 3.3 weeks) using flexible latent class mixed models with low-rank thin-plate splines. Associations between trajectory classes and infant outcomes were analyzed using multivariable Poisson or linear regression.ResultsWeight change from prepregnancy to delivery was 15.4 ± 6.3 kg for people with an underweight body mass index, 15.4 ± 5.8 kg for healthy weight, 14.7 ± 6.9 kg for overweight, and 12.5 ± 6.4 kg for obesity. Three trajectory classes were identified: low (Class 1), moderate (Class 2), or high gain (Class 3). Class 1 (24.7%) maintained weight for 15 weeks and then gained an estimated 6.6 kg at 32 weeks. Class 2 (60.9%) exhibited steady gain with 13.5 kg predicted total gain, and Class 3 (14.4%) showed rapid gain across pregnancy with 21.3 kg predicted gain. Compared to Class 1, Class 3 was associated with higher birth weight z-score (β = 0.63, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.31,0.96), increased risk for large for gestational age (IRR = 5.60, 95% CI: 1.59, 19.67), and birth
- Published
- 2024