4.6 Article

Perinatal outcomes and gestational weight gain in women with eating disorders: a population-based cohort study

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.2012.03467.x

Keywords

Eating disorders; Generation R; gestational weight gain; obstetric outcomes; pregnancy

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research
  2. Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam
  3. Erasmus University Rotterdam
  4. Dutch Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport
  5. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMw)
  6. ZonMw [10.000.1003]
  7. NWO-ZonMW VIDI grant [017.106.370]
  8. National Institute for Health Research [CS/08/08/14] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Please cite this paper as: Micali N, De Stavola B, dos-Santos-Silva I, Steenweg-de Graaff J, Jansen P, Jaddoe V, Hofman A, Verhulst F, Steegers E, Tiemeier H. Perinatal outcomes and gestational weight gain in women with eating disorders: a population-based cohort study. BJOG 2012;119:14931502. Objective To investigate adverse perinatal outcomes and gestational weight gain trajectories in women with lifetime (current/past) eating disorders (ED: anorexia nervosa [AN] and bulimia nervosa [BN]). Design A longitudinal population-based birth cohort. Setting Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Sample Women who enrolled prenatally, had complete information on exposure (lifetime ED), and gave birth to a live singleton (n = 5256). Four groups of exposed women: lifetime AN (n = 129), lifetime BN (n = 209), lifetime AN + BN (n = 100), other lifetime psychiatric disorder (n = 1002) were compared with unexposed women (n = 3816). Methods Perinatal outcomes and gestational weight gain were obtained from obstetric and midwifery records, self-report and objective measurements. Exposed women were compared with unexposed women within the cohort using linear, logistic regression and mixed models. Main outcome measures Any pregnancy, delivery and postnatal complications. Birthweight adjusted for gestational age, prematurity (born <37 weeks), small-for-gestational age; maternal weight gain during pregnancy. Results Maternal AN was positively associated with suspected fetal distress. No differences were found in mean birthweight, prevalence of a small-for-gestational-age, or premature birth. Relative to unexposed women, women with AN had, on average, a lower body weight but a higher rate of weight gain subsequently; whereas women with BN had a higher body weight but a lower rate of weight gain. Conclusions Maternal lifetime ED is associated with few adverse perinatal outcomes in this sample. Differential gestational weight gain patterns in women with AN and BN are consistent with possible biological compensatory mechanisms aimed at protecting the fetus.

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