Conference Coverage

Maternal morbidity and BMI: A dose-response relationship


 

REPORTING FROM ACOG 2018

It had been known that women with obesity are at increased risk of some serious complications of pregnancy, including severe maternal morbidity and mortality, and that those considered morbidly obese – with BMIs of 40 and above – are most likely to experience these complications, Dr. Platner said. However, she added, there’s a paucity of data to inform maternal risk stratification by level of obesity.

“We included the group of superobese women, which is significant in the surgical literature, and that’s a BMI of 50 and above ... we thought that would be an important subgroup to analyze in this population,” she said.

Dr. Platner said that she and her colleagues already had the clinical impressions that women with the highest BMIs were most likely to have serious complications. “I don’t think that these findings are particularly surprising,” she said. “This is what our hypothesis was in terms of why we did this study.”

The greater surprise, she said, was the magnitude of increased risk seen for serious morbidity with higher levels of obesity.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Hints of altered microRNA expression in women exposed to EDCs
MDedge Family Medicine
ACOG advises earlier, more comprehensive postpartum care
MDedge Family Medicine
Antiretroviral choice for pregnant women with HIV does not appear to impact birth outcomes
MDedge Family Medicine
Prolactin, the pituitary, and pregnancy: Where’s the balance?
MDedge Family Medicine
Time to scrap LMWH for prevention of placenta-mediated pregnancy complications?
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Prepaid prenatal care bundle delivers quality care to uninsured
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Novel postpartum depression drug effective in phase 3 trial
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: To boost newborn breastfeeding rates, hide the EHR formula order
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Postpartum care gets a new look
MDedge Family Medicine
Glyburide failed to show noninferiority in gestational diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine