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Comparison of methods for identifying small‐for‐gestational‐age infants at risk of perinatal mortality among obese mothers: a hospital‐based cohort study
Author(s) - 
Hinkle SN, 
Sjaarda LA, 
Albert PS, 
Mendola P, 
Grantz KL
Publication year - 2016
Publication title - 
bjog: an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.157
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1471-0528
pISSN - 1470-0328
DOI - 10.1111/1471-0528.13896
Subject(s) - medicine , small for gestational age , overweight , obstetrics , body mass index , population , birth weight , pediatrics , cohort study , gestational age , cohort , pregnancy , environmental health , genetics , biology
Objective  To assess differences in small‐for‐gestational age ( SGA ) classifications for the detection of neonates with increased perinatal mortality risk among obese women and subsequently assess the association between prepregnancy body mass index ( BMI ) status and  SGA .    Design  Hospital‐based cohort.    Setting  Twelve  US  clinical centres (2002–08).    Population  A total of 114 626 singleton, nonanomalous pregnancies.    Methods  Data were collected using electronic medical record abstraction. Relative risks ( RR ) with 95%  CI  were estimated.    Main outcome measures   SGA  trends (birthweight < 10th centile) classified using population‐based ( SGA POP  ), intrauterine ( SGA IU  ) and customised ( SGA CUST  ) references were assessed. The  SGA ‐associated perinatal mortality risk was estimated among obese women. Using the  SGA  method most associated with perinatal mortality, the association between prepregnancy  BMI  and  SGA  was estimated.    Results  The overall perinatal mortality prevalence was 0.55% and this increased significantly with increasing  BMI  ( P  < 0.01). Among obese women,  SGA IU   detected the highest proportion of perinatal mortality cases (2.49%). Perinatal mortality was 5.32 times (95%  CI  3.72–7.60) more likely among  SGA IU   neonates than non‐ SGA IU   neonates. This is in comparison with the 3.71‐fold (2.49–5.53) and 4.81‐fold (3.41–6.80) increased risk observed when  SGA POP   and  SGA CUST   were used, respectively. Compared with women of normal weight, overweight women ( RR  = 0.82, 95%  CI  0.78–0.86) and obese women ( RR  = 0.80; 95%  CI  0.75–0.83) had a lower risk for delivering an  SGA IU   neonate.    Conclusion  Among obese women, the intrauterine reference best identified neonates at risk of perinatal mortality. Based on  SGA IU  ,  SGA  is less common among obese women but these  SGA  babies are at a high risk of death and remain an important group for surveillance.    Tweetable abstract   SGA  is less common among obese women but these  SGA  babies are at a high risk of death.
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