Press Release: June 30, 2014
STANFORD, Calif. 鈥 Women who are obese before they become pregnant face an increased risk of delivering a very premature baby, according to a new study of nearly 1 million California births.
The findings from the Stanford University School of Medicine provide important clues as to what triggers extremely preterm births, specifically those that occur prior to 28 weeks of pregnancy.
The study, published in the July issue of Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, found no link between maternal obesity and premature births that happen between 28 and 37 weeks of the normal 40-week gestation period. The disparity suggests that premature birth may have different causes at different stages of pregnancy.
鈥淯ntil now, people have been thinking about preterm birth as one condition, simply by defining it as any birth that happens at least three weeks early,鈥 said Gary Shaw, DrPH, professor of pediatrics and lead author of the new study.
鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not as simple as that. Preterm birth is not one construct; gestational age matters.鈥
Preterm births affect one in nine pregnancies, or more than a half-million U.S. babies per year. Prematurity can lead to lifelong health problems, such as cerebral palsy, developmental delays and impaired vision or hearing. Babies born before 28 weeks of pregnancy are at especially high risk.
High U.S. prematurity rates prompted the 2011 launch of the March of Dimes Prematurity Research Center at Stanford University School of Medicine, the first of five such centers the March of Dimes has planned across the country. The new findings are a product of the center鈥檚 work.
The study, which examined nearly all California births between January 2007 and December 2009, was the largest ever to look for population-based links between maternal obesity and prematurity. To focus on spontaneous preterm births, the researchers excluded from analysis women who were pregnant with twins or other multiples, as well as women with illnesses previously linked to prematurity, such as diabetes, high blood pressure or preeclampsia. After these exclusions, the team had 989,697 births to analyze. Births were classified by gestational age, and many factors about the mothers were considered in the analysis, including body mass index, race/ethnicity, whether they were first-time mothers, educational attainment, when prenatal care began, source of health insurance, maternal age and maternal height.
For first-time mothers, obesity was linked with a substantial increase in risk of delivery before 28 weeks of pregnancy. The risk was highest at the earliest gestational ages and also at the highest levels of obesity. For instance, non-Hispanic, white first-time mothers in the most obese category were six times more likely than normal-weight women to deliver a baby between 20 and 23 weeks.
Obese women having their second or later child were also more likely to deliver very early than normal-weight women, though the risk was less pronounced than for first-time mothers.
鈥淚deally, as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has already recommended, women should embark upon a healthy diet and exercise program before becoming pregnant,鈥 said study co-author Deirdre Lyell, MD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology and an obstetrician at Lucile Packard Children鈥檚 Hospital Stanford.
鈥淲omen who are obese should also consider meeting their obstetrician to discuss and understand the risks beyond those identified in this research,鈥 Lyell added, noting that obesity has previously been shown to raise women鈥檚 risk of such pregnancy and delivery complications as gestational diabetes, preeclampsia and cesarean section.
In general, African-American women face a greater risk of preterm delivery than other populations, so the researchers were surprised to find that the effect of obesity on early preterm delivery was not explained by women鈥檚 racial/ethnic background. The finding indicates that there is something about obesity itself that can trigger early birth, which may or may not be associated with other factors, such as socioeconomic patterns, that put African-American women at greater risk.
鈥淭his is a clue that informs what sort of research we should try next,鈥 Shaw said. For example, the researchers plan to investigate the role of increased inflammation from obesity because this factor cuts across racial backgrounds. 鈥淲e believe the inflammatory process is contributing to preterm birth, particularly at earlier gestational ages,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e at the edge of trying to solve this puzzle.鈥
Other Stanford co-authors are Paul Wise, MD, MPH, professor of pediatrics and of health research and policy; Jonathan Mayo, data analyst; Suzan Carmichael, PhD, associate professor of pediatrics; Catherine Ley, PhD, senior research scientist; Bat Zion Shachar, MD, postdoctoral scholar; Kathryn Melsop, program manager and data analyst; Ciaran Phibbs, PhD, associate professor of pediatrics; David Stevenson, MD, professor of pediatrics and of obstetrics and gynecology; Julie Parsonnet, MD, professor of medicine and of health research and policy; and Jeffrey Gould, MD, professor of pediatrics. Carmichael, Stevenson, Parsonnet and Gould are members of Stanford鈥檚 Child Health Research Institute. Stevenson and Gould are neonatologists at Lucile Packard Children鈥檚 Hospital Stanford. Stevenson is primary investigator for the March of Dimes Prematurity Research Center at Stanford University School of Medicine, and Shaw and Wise are co-primary investigators.
The research was funded by the prematurity research center.
Information about Stanford鈥檚 Department of Pediatrics is available at .
Print Media Contact:
Erin Digitale
(650) 724-9175
digitale@stanford.edu
Broadcast Media Contact:
Winter Johnson
(650) 498-7056
wijohnson@stanfordchildrens.org
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