Association between weight gain during pregnancy and postpartum weight retention and obesity: A bias-adjusted meta-analysis

Date

2013

Authors

Mannan, Munim
Doi, Suhail
Mamun, Abdullah

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Abstract

Gestational weight gain (GWG) is associated with postpartum weight retention (PPWR) in women. The strength of the association between GWG and long-term PPWR and body mass index (BMI), however, is still unclear. Publications from different databases were systematically extracted and the articles relevant to this study were reviewed to quantify the effect estimate of GWG on PPWR and BMI using a bias-adjusted method. The Institute of Medicine categories of "inadequate," "adequate," and "excess" were used to define GWG. The time span for PPWR was divided into three periods (< 1 year, 1 year to 9years, and ≥15years) to determine outcome at different times postpartum. Twelve studies met the eligibility criteria and were included in the analyses. Women with an inadequate GWG had a significantly lower mean PPWR of -2.14kg (95%CI, -2.61 to -1.66) than women with an adequate GWG, who had a mean PPWR of 3.15kg (95%CI, 2.47 to 3.82) up to 21years postpartum. Over the postpartum time span, a U-shaped relationship was observed between the weighted mean difference calculated for women with excess GWG and the weighted mean difference calculated for women with adequate GWG, and this relationship was time independent between these two groups. Postpartum BMI showed a similar relationship and magnitude of change, but the exact loss or gain was difficult to assess due to fewer studies (n=5) with considerable heterogeneity of BMI measurements. The findings of this study suggest that GWG outside of the Institute of Medicine recommendations can lead to both short-term and long-term postpartum weight imbalance.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: article; body mass; disease association; gestational weight gain; human; meta analysis; obesity; outcome assessment; postpartum weight retention; pregnancy; puerperium; sensitivity analysis; systematic review; weight gain; Body Mass Index; Female; Humans; Body mass index; Gestational weight gain; Postpartum weight retention

Citation

Source

Nutrition Reviews

Type

Journal article

Book Title

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Restricted until

2037-12-31