Abstract

We sought to determine risk factors associated with fetal macrosomia and to explore the long-term consequence of infant macrosomia at the age of 7 years. A prospective population based cohort study was designed to examine the associations between maternal and perinatal characteristics and the risk of macrosomia. A nested case-control study was conducted to explore the long-term health consequence of infant macrosomia. The mean maternal age of the macrosomia group was 24.74±3.32 years, which is slightly older than that in the control group (24.35±3.14 years, P = 0.000). The mean maternal body mass index (BMI) at early pregnancy was 22.75±2.81 kg/m2, which was also higher than that in the control group (21.76±2.59 kg/m2, P = 0.000). About 64.6% of macrosomic ne-onates were males, compared with 51.0% in the control group (P = 0.000). Compared with women with normal weight (BMI: 18.5-23.9 kg/m2), women who were overweight (BMI: 24-27.9 kg/m2) or obese (BMI≥28 kg/m2), respectively, had a 1.69-fold (P = 0.000) and a 1.49-fold (P = 0.000) increased risks of having a neonate with macrosomia, while light weight (BMI<18.5 kg/m2) women had an approximately 50% reduction of the risk. Fur-thermore, macrosomia infant had a 1.52-fold and 1.50-fold risk, respectively, of developing overweight or obesity at the age of 7 years (P = 0.001 and P = 0.000). Older maternal age, higher maternal BMI at early pregnancy and male gender were independent risk factors of macrosomia. Macrosomic infant was associated with an increased predisposition to develop overweight or obesity at the beginning of their childhood.

Highlights

  • Fetal macrosomia has attracted immense attention because of the increased risk for both mothers and infants

  • We examined risk factors for macrosomia in the context of maternal age, maternal education, maternal residence, maternal body mass index (BMI) at early pregnancy, maternal smoking/drinking during pregnancy, and infant gender

  • By univariate logistic regression analyses, we found that maternal age at delivery, first trimester maternal BMI, and infant male gender were significantly associated with the risk of neonate macrosomia (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Fetal macrosomia has attracted immense attention because of the increased risk for both mothers and infants. We performed a comparison of the development at the age of 7 years between 700 children with macrosomia and a control group of 5137 with normal birth weight from the birth cohort, by using an unmatched nested case-control study design. We examined risk factors for macrosomia in the context of maternal age, maternal education, maternal residence, maternal BMI at early pregnancy (within 12 weeks of gestation), maternal smoking/drinking during pregnancy, and infant gender.

Results
Conclusion
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