TY - JOUR
T1 - Associations of B Vitamin-Related Dietary Pattern during Pregnancy with Birth Outcomes
T2 - A Population-Based Study in Northwest China
AU - Li, Shanshan
AU - Liu, Danmeng
AU - Kang, Yijun
AU - Qu, Pengfei
AU - Mi, Baibing
AU - Zhu, Zhonghai
AU - Han, Lixin
AU - Zhao, Yaling
AU - Chen, Fangyao
AU - Pei, Leilei
AU - Zeng, Lingxia
AU - Wang, Duolao
AU - Yan, Hong
AU - Dang, Shaonong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2022/2/1
Y1 - 2022/2/1
N2 - This study aimed to derive a maternal dietary pattern to explain the variation in B vitamins during pregnancy and to investigate this pattern in relation to birth outcomes. A total of 7347 women who gave birth to live newborns less than one year were included. Their dietary pattern during pregnancy was derived using the reduced-rank regression method with six B vitamins as response variables. Associations between dietary pattern score and birth weight, gestational age at delivery, birth weight Z score, low birth weight, preterm, and small-for-gestational-age (SGA) were estimated using generalised linear mixed models. We identified a high B-vitamin dietary pattern characterised by high intakes of animal foods, vegetables, fungi and algae, legumes, and low intakes of oils and cereals. Women in the highest quartile of this pattern score had newborns with a 44.5 g (95% CI: 13.8, 75.2 g) higher birth weight, 0.101 (95% CI: 0.029, 0.172) higher birth weight Z score, and 27.2% (OR: 0.728; 95% CI: 0.582, 0.910) lower risk of SGA than those in the lowest quartile. Our study suggested that adherence to the high B-vitamin dietary pattern during pregnancy was associated with a higher birth weight and a lower risk of SGA.
AB - This study aimed to derive a maternal dietary pattern to explain the variation in B vitamins during pregnancy and to investigate this pattern in relation to birth outcomes. A total of 7347 women who gave birth to live newborns less than one year were included. Their dietary pattern during pregnancy was derived using the reduced-rank regression method with six B vitamins as response variables. Associations between dietary pattern score and birth weight, gestational age at delivery, birth weight Z score, low birth weight, preterm, and small-for-gestational-age (SGA) were estimated using generalised linear mixed models. We identified a high B-vitamin dietary pattern characterised by high intakes of animal foods, vegetables, fungi and algae, legumes, and low intakes of oils and cereals. Women in the highest quartile of this pattern score had newborns with a 44.5 g (95% CI: 13.8, 75.2 g) higher birth weight, 0.101 (95% CI: 0.029, 0.172) higher birth weight Z score, and 27.2% (OR: 0.728; 95% CI: 0.582, 0.910) lower risk of SGA than those in the lowest quartile. Our study suggested that adherence to the high B-vitamin dietary pattern during pregnancy was associated with a higher birth weight and a lower risk of SGA.
KW - B vitamins
KW - Birth weight
KW - Dietary pattern
KW - Pregnancy
KW - Reduced rank regression
KW - Small-for-gestational-age
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85123610941
U2 - 10.3390/nu14030600
DO - 10.3390/nu14030600
M3 - 文章
C2 - 35276959
AN - SCOPUS:85123610941
SN - 2072-6643
VL - 14
JO - Nutrients
JF - Nutrients
IS - 3
M1 - 600
ER -