The association between pre-gravid and first trimester maternal weight and its implications for clinical research studies

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作者
Ravi Retnakaran
Chang Ye
Shi Wu Wen
Hongzhuan Tan
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[1] Mount Sinai Hospital,Leadership Sinai Centre for Diabetes
[2] University of Toronto,Division of Endocrinology
[3] Mount Sinai Hospital,Lunenfeld
[4] University of Ottawa,Tanenbaum Research Institute
[5] Ottawa Hospital Research Institute,OMNI Research Group, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
[6] University of Ottawa,Clinical Epidemiology Program
[7] Central South University,Department of Epidemiology and Community Medicine
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In clinical research, weight measurement in first trimester is often treated as a surrogate for pre-pregnancy weight. The validity of this critical assumption, however, is uncertain. Thus, we sought to prospectively evaluate the relationship between pre-gravid weight and first trimester weight. In this prospective preconception observational cohort study, 474 newly-married women in Liuyang, China, underwent pre-gravid evaluation at median 17.7 weeks before a singleton pregnancy, during which they had weight measurement in first trimester. The relationship between pre-gravid and first trimester weight was assessed by Bland–Altman analysis, Concordance Correlation Coefficient, and Pearson correlation. Mean pre-gravid weight was 49.8 ± 6.4 kg and mean weight in first trimester was 51.1 ± 7.0 kg. The Concordance Correlation Coefficient between pre-gravid and first trimester weight was 0.76 (95% limits of agreement: 0.72–0.80) and Pearson correlation was r = 0.78 (p < 0.0001), indicative of good concordance and correlation. As the timing of the weight measurement in first trimester increased in weekly increments from < 8 weeks to 14 weeks, the Concordance Correlation Coefficient ranged between 0.69 to 0.76 and the Pearson correlation ranged from 0.71 to 0.78 (all p < 0.0001). In conclusion, the observed concordance between pre-gravid weight and weight measured at any point in the first trimester provides a measure of validation for the widespread practice in clinical research of treating first trimester weight measurement as a surrogate for maternal weight before pregnancy.
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