Abstract

Awareness that maternal diet may influence the outcome of pregnancy as well as the long-term health of mother and child has increased in recent years. A new food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) was developed and validated specifically for the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa). The MoBa FFQ is a semi-quantitative tool which covers the average intake of food, beverages and dietary supplements during the first 4 to 5 months of pregnancy. It includes questions about intakes of 255 foods and dishes and was used from 2002 onwards. Data assessed by the MoBa FFQ is available for 87,700 pregnancies. Numerous sub-studies have examined associations between dietary factors and health outcomes in MoBa. The aim of this paper is to summarize the results from 19 studies of maternal diet and pregnancy outcomes, which is the complete collection of studies based on the MoBa FFQ and published before September 2014. The overall research question is whether maternal diet – from single substances to dietary patterns – matters for pregnancy outcome. The pregnancy outcomes studied till now include birth size measures, infants being small and large for gestational age, pregnancy duration, preterm delivery, preeclampsia, as well as maternal gestational weight gain and postpartum weight retention. As a whole, the results from these studies corroborate that the current dietary recommendations to pregnant women are sound and that maternal diet during pregnancy is likely to contribute to reduce the risk of pregnancy complications including preterm birth, preeclampsia, and reduced foetal growth. The results provide supporting evidence for recommending pregnant women to consume vegetables, fruit, whole grain, fish, dairy, and water regularly and lower the intake of sugar sweetened beverages, processed meat products and salty snacks. The results showing negative impact of even low levels of environmental contaminants support the precautionary advice on consumption of foods containing these. New findings are that particularly lean fish explained the positive association between seafood intake and foetal growth, and the indications of a protective effect of probiotic and antimicrobial foods on pregnancy outcomes. This points to the importance of diet composition for a healthy gut flora and the body’s immune response. Although these studies are observational and cannot infer causality, the results identify diet as an important modifiable lifestyle factor, suggesting that healthy eating, defined as following the official recommendations, is particularly important in pregnancy.

Highlights

  • Diet impacts all systems of the body, including the foetus, and can modulate different functions far beyond the levels that are connected to malnutrition, e.g.expression of genes, hormone levels, inflammation and the nervous system [1,2]

  • The aim of the present study is to summarize the complete collection of studies in MoBa published before September 2014 which examined maternal diet and pregnancy outcomes, focusing on foetal growth measures, preeclampsia, preterm delivery, gestational weight gain and maternal weight retention

  • The studies of maternal diet and pregnancy outcomes summarised in this paper adds to the evidence that maternal diet may modify pregnancy outcomes, and that increasing the daily intake of healthy foods like vegetables, fruit, whole grain, fish, dairy and water for drinking is of clinical importance

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Summary

Introduction

Diet impacts all systems of the body, including the foetus, and can modulate different functions far beyond the levels that are connected to malnutrition, e.g.expression of genes, hormone levels, inflammation and the nervous system [1,2]. During the last decades there has been increased understanding that the maternal diet directly affects the growing foetus and influences health risks later in life [3,4,5,6]. The Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa) is a prospective population-based pregnancy cohort study conducted by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. We were given the opportunity to develop and validate a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) tailored for the MoBa study and to be answered during pregnancy.

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