Does overweight before pregnancy reduce the occurrence of gastroschisis?: the Japan Environment and Children's Study.
Takehiro MichikawaShin YamazakiEiko SudaTatsuo KurodaShoji F NakayamaTomohiko IsobeYayoi KobayashiMiyuki Iwai-ShimadaMakiko SekiyamaToshihiro KawamotoHiroshi Nittanull nullPublished in: BMC research notes (2020)
We used data from a nationwide birth cohort study which recruited pregnant women between 2011 and 2014. Among 92,796 women who delivered singleton live births, the frequency of underweight (pre-pregnancy BMI < 18.5 kg/m2) was 16.2%, reference weight (18.5-24.9 kg/m2) 73.1%, and overweight (≥ 25.0 kg/m2) 10.6%. We identified only 9 infants with gastroschisis, 2 of whose women were underweight (frequency of gastroschisis = 0.01%), 5 were in the reference group (0.01%), and 2 were overweight (0.02%). Of these 9 women, none were aged < 20 years, 2 were aged 20-29 years (frequency = 0.01%), and 7 were aged 30-39 years (0.01%). No reduction in the occurrence of gastroschisis was apparent among Japanese women who were overweight before pregnancy.