Outcomes of maternal weight gain.

Meera Viswanathan, Anna Maria Siega-Riz, Merry K Moos, Andrea Deierlein, Sunni Mumford, Julie Knaack, Patricia Thieda, Linda J Lux, Kathleen N Lohr
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Abstract

Objectives: The RTI International-University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Evidence-based Practice Center (RTI-UNC EPC) systematically reviewed evidence on outcomes of gestational weight gain and their confounders and effect modifiers, outcomes of weight gain within or outside the 1990 Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines, risks and benefits of weight gain recommendations, and anthropometric measures of weight gain.

Data sources: We searched MEDLINE Cochrane Collaboration resources, Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature, and Embase.

Review methods: We included studies published in English from 1990 through October 2007. We excluded studies with low sample size (based on study design: case series <100 subjects and cohorts <40 subjects).

Results: Overall, strong evidence supported an association between gestational weight gains and the following outcomes: preterm birth, total birthweight, low birthweight (<2,500 g), macrosomia, large-for-gestational-age (LGA) infants, and small-for-gestational-age (SGA) infants; moderate evidence supported an association for cesarean delivery and intermediate-term weight retention (3 months to 3 years postpartum). The studies reviewed provided strong evidence for the independent association of pregravid weight status and outcomes, moderate evidence for age and parity, and weak evidence for race. Regarding outcomes of weight gain within or outside 1990 IOM guidelines, moderate to strong evidence suggests an association between weight gain below IOM recommendations and preterm birth, low birthweight, SGA birthweights, and failure to initiate breastfeeding, and strong evidence for the association between weight gain above IOM recommendations and high birthweight, macrosomia, and LGA birthweights. Moderate evidence supports an association between weight gain above IOM guidelines and cesarean delivery and postpartum weight retention in the short, intermediate, and long term. Included research is inadequate for objective assessments of the range of harms and benefits of providing all women, irrespective of age, race or ethnicity, or pregravid body mass index (BMI), with the same recommendation for weight gain in pregnancy.

Conclusions: Gestational weight gain is associated with some infant and maternal outcomes. One weight gain recommendation for all women is not supported by the evidence identified in this review. To understand fully the impact of gestational weight gain on short- and long-term outcomes for women and their offspring will require that researchers use consistent definitions of weight gain during pregnancy, better address confounders in their analyses, improve study designs and statistical models, and conduct studies with longer followup.

母亲体重增加的结果。
目的:RTI国际-北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校循证实践中心(RTI- unc EPC)系统地回顾了妊娠期体重增加的结果及其混杂因素和影响因素,体重增加的结果符合或不符合1990年医学研究所(IOM)指南,体重增加建议的风险和益处,以及体重增加的人体测量测量。数据来源:我们检索了MEDLINE Cochrane协作资源、护理与相关健康文献累积索引和Embase。回顾方法:我们纳入了从1990年到2007年10月用英文发表的研究。我们排除了低样本量的研究(基于研究设计:病例系列)结果:总体而言,强有力的证据支持妊娠期体重增加与以下结局之间的关联:早产、总出生体重、低出生体重(结论:妊娠期体重增加与一些婴儿和母亲的结局有关。本综述中发现的证据并不支持对所有女性增加体重的建议。为了充分了解孕期体重增加对妇女及其后代的短期和长期结果的影响,研究人员需要对孕期体重增加使用一致的定义,在分析中更好地解决混杂因素,改进研究设计和统计模型,并进行更长时间的随访研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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