Abstract

American Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommends different ranges of gestational weight gain (GWG) based on pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI). In Taiwan, IOM guidelines are implemented concurrently with the local recommendation for GWG (10-14kg). This study compared between the two sets of guidelines in relation to adverse perinatal outcomes. We analyzed 31,653 primiparas with singletons from 2011 to 2016 annual National Breastfeeding Surveys. Logistic regressions for preterm birth, small for gestational age (SGA), large for gestational age (LGA), cesarean section and excessive postpartum weight retention (EPWR) were fitted separately for GWG categorized according to IOM and Taiwan ranges. Areas under the receiver-operator curves (AUC) and the predicted probabilities for each outcome were compared in each BMI group. AUC for both guidelines ranged within 0.51-0.73. Compared to Taiwan recommendation, IOM ranges showed lower probabilities of SGA for underweight (0.11-0.15 versus 0.14-0.18), of LGA for obese (0.12-0.15 versus 0.15-0.18), of EPWR for overweight (0.19-0.30 versus 0.27-0.39), and obese (0.15-0.22 versus 0.25-0.36); and higher probabilities of EPWR for underweight (0.17-0.33 versus 0.14-0.22). CONCLUSIONSFOR PRACTICE: Discriminative performance of IOM and Taiwan recommendations was poor for the five adverse birth outcomes, and no preference for either set of recommendations could be inferred from our results. In the absence of specific GWG guidelines, health care workers may provide inconsistent information to their patients. Future research is needed to explore optimal GWG ranges that can reliably predict locally relevant perinatal outcomes for mother and child.

Highlights

  • Many women and health providers are concerned with the question how much weight should be gained during pregnancy 1

  • Discriminative performance of Institute of Medicine (IOM) and Taiwan recommendations was poor for the five adverse birth outcomes, and no preference for either set of recommendations could be inferred from our results

  • The underweight group showed the highest proportion of small for gestational age (SGA) (15.2% versus 8.8–10.8%), while the obese group showed the highest proportion of preterm birth (9.7% versus 5.9–7.1%), large for gestational age (LGA) (17.1% versus 4.3–12.4%), and caesarean section (50.2% versus 28.3–40.5%)

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Summary

Introduction

Many women and health providers are concerned with the question how much weight should be gained during pregnancy 1. Gaining too much or not enough weight may affect maternal and child health during pregnancy, at delivery, and later in life, including increasing risks of obesity, cardiovascular diseases, and diabetes for mothers and their children 2. The recent guidelines were developed by the American Institute of Medicine (IOM) in response to the obesity epidemic 2. Based on the comprehensive literature review, optimal ranges for GWG were defined for each category of pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI): 12.5–18 kg for BMI < 18.5; 11.5–16 kg for 18.5 ≤ BMI < 25; 7–11.5 kg for 25 ≤ BMI < 30; and [5,6,7,8,9] kg for BMI ≥ 30 2. American Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommends different ranges of gestational weight gain (GWG) based on pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI). This study compared between the two sets of guidelines in relation to adverse perinatal outcomes

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