4.4 Article

Gestational weight gain adequacy among twin pregnancies in France

Journal

MATERNAL AND CHILD NUTRITION
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mcn.13436

Keywords

body mass index; classification; gestational weight gain; Institute of Medicine; pregnancy; pregnancy weight gain; twins

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The objective of this study was to describe gestational weight gain (GWG) and assess the applicability of the 2009 Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines in a French cohort. The study found that almost half of the women had insufficient GWG according to the IOM recommendations, with only a small percentage having excessive GWG, regardless of BMI or parity. The JUMODA-derived GWG adequacy classification was lower than the IOM recommendations, indicating that a significant proportion of French women had inadequate GWG.
The objective of this paper is to describe gestational weight gain (GWG), to assess the applicability of the 2009 Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines, and to derive a GWG adequacy classification within a French cohort. We included twins from the national, prospective, population-based JUmeaux MODe d'Accouchement (JUMODA) cohort study (2014-2015). Following the IOM approach, we selected a 'standard' population of term pregnancies with 'optimal' birthweight (>= 2500 g; n = 2562). GWG adequacy (insufficient; adequate; excessive) was defined using IOM recommendations (normal body mass index [BMI]: 16.8-24.5 kg [also utilized for underweight BMI]; overweight: 14.1-22.7 kg; obese: 11.4-19.1 kg). Additionally, using the IOM approach, we determined the 25th and 75th percentiles of GWG in our standard population to create a JUMODA-derived GWG adequacy classification. GWG and GWG adequacy were described, overall and by BMI and parity. In the JUMODA standard population of term twin livebirths with optimal birthweight, mean GWG was 16.1 kg (standard deviation 6.3). Using IOM recommendations, almost half (46.5%) of the women had insufficient and few (10.0%) had excessive GWG, with similar results regardless of BMI or parity. The 25th and 75th percentiles of GWG in the JUMODA standard population (underweight: 13-21 kg; normal weight: 13-20 kg; overweight: 11-19 kg; obese: 7-16 kg) were lower than the IOM recommendations. The IOM recommendations classified a relatively high percentage of French women as having insufficient and a low percentage as having excessive GWG. Additional research to evaluate recommendations in relation to adverse perinatal outcomes is needed to determine whether the IOM recommendations or the JUMODA-derived classification is more appropriate for French twin gestations.

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