Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.

BACKGROUND:There is increasing evidence that lower maternal stature is associated with shorter gestational length in the offspring. We examined the association between maternal height and the likelihood of delivering preterm babies in a large and homogeneous cohort of Swedish women. METHODS:This stu...

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Main Authors: José G B Derraik, Maria Lundgren, Wayne S Cutfield, Fredrik Ahlsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4839587?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-020ab71909c7433ba3656087d6aaa22a2020-11-24T21:09:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01114e015430410.1371/journal.pone.0154304Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.José G B DerraikMaria LundgrenWayne S CutfieldFredrik AhlssonBACKGROUND:There is increasing evidence that lower maternal stature is associated with shorter gestational length in the offspring. We examined the association between maternal height and the likelihood of delivering preterm babies in a large and homogeneous cohort of Swedish women. METHODS:This study covers antenatal data from the Swedish Medical Birth Register on 192,432 women (aged 26.0 years on average) born at term, from singleton pregnancies, and of Nordic ethnicity. Continuous associations between women's heights and the likelihood of preterm birth in the offspring were evaluated. Stratified analyses were also carried out, separating women into different height categories. RESULTS:Every cm decrease in maternal stature was associated with 0.2 days shortening of gestational age in the offspring (p<0.0001) and increasing odds of having a child born preterm (OR 1.03), very preterm (OR 1.03), or extremely preterm (OR 1.04). Besides, odds of all categories of preterm birth were highest among the shortest women but lowest among the tallest mothers. Specifically, women of short stature (≤155 cm or ≤-2.0 SDS below the population mean) had greater odds of having preterm (OR 1.65) or very preterm (OR 1.47) infants than women of average stature (-0.5 to 0.5 SDS). When compared to women of tall stature (≥179 cm), mothers of short stature had even greater odds of giving birth to preterm (OR 2.07) or very preterm (OR 2.16) infants. CONCLUSIONS:Among Swedish women, decreasing height was associated with a progressive increase in the odds of having an infant born preterm. Maternal short stature is a likely contributing factor to idiopathic preterm births worldwide, possibly due to maternal anatomical constraints.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4839587?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author José G B Derraik
Maria Lundgren
Wayne S Cutfield
Fredrik Ahlsson
spellingShingle José G B Derraik
Maria Lundgren
Wayne S Cutfield
Fredrik Ahlsson
Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.
PLoS ONE
author_facet José G B Derraik
Maria Lundgren
Wayne S Cutfield
Fredrik Ahlsson
author_sort José G B Derraik
title Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.
title_short Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.
title_full Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.
title_fullStr Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.
title_full_unstemmed Maternal Height and Preterm Birth: A Study on 192,432 Swedish Women.
title_sort maternal height and preterm birth: a study on 192,432 swedish women.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description BACKGROUND:There is increasing evidence that lower maternal stature is associated with shorter gestational length in the offspring. We examined the association between maternal height and the likelihood of delivering preterm babies in a large and homogeneous cohort of Swedish women. METHODS:This study covers antenatal data from the Swedish Medical Birth Register on 192,432 women (aged 26.0 years on average) born at term, from singleton pregnancies, and of Nordic ethnicity. Continuous associations between women's heights and the likelihood of preterm birth in the offspring were evaluated. Stratified analyses were also carried out, separating women into different height categories. RESULTS:Every cm decrease in maternal stature was associated with 0.2 days shortening of gestational age in the offspring (p<0.0001) and increasing odds of having a child born preterm (OR 1.03), very preterm (OR 1.03), or extremely preterm (OR 1.04). Besides, odds of all categories of preterm birth were highest among the shortest women but lowest among the tallest mothers. Specifically, women of short stature (≤155 cm or ≤-2.0 SDS below the population mean) had greater odds of having preterm (OR 1.65) or very preterm (OR 1.47) infants than women of average stature (-0.5 to 0.5 SDS). When compared to women of tall stature (≥179 cm), mothers of short stature had even greater odds of giving birth to preterm (OR 2.07) or very preterm (OR 2.16) infants. CONCLUSIONS:Among Swedish women, decreasing height was associated with a progressive increase in the odds of having an infant born preterm. Maternal short stature is a likely contributing factor to idiopathic preterm births worldwide, possibly due to maternal anatomical constraints.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4839587?pdf=render
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