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Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status

BACKGROUND: Iron accrued in utero is critical for fetal and infant neurocognitive development. Psychosocial stress and obesity can each suppress fetal iron accrual. Their combined effects and differences by fetal sex are not known. In an observational pregnancy cohort study in Mexico City, we invest...

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Autores principales: Campbell, Rebecca K, Tamayo-Ortiz, Marcela, Cantoral, Alejandra, Schnaas, Lourdes, Osorio-Valencia, Erika, Wright, Rosalind J, Téllez-Rojo, Martha M, Wright, Robert O
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7026381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32099952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzaa018
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author Campbell, Rebecca K
Tamayo-Ortiz, Marcela
Cantoral, Alejandra
Schnaas, Lourdes
Osorio-Valencia, Erika
Wright, Rosalind J
Téllez-Rojo, Martha M
Wright, Robert O
author_facet Campbell, Rebecca K
Tamayo-Ortiz, Marcela
Cantoral, Alejandra
Schnaas, Lourdes
Osorio-Valencia, Erika
Wright, Rosalind J
Téllez-Rojo, Martha M
Wright, Robert O
author_sort Campbell, Rebecca K
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Iron accrued in utero is critical for fetal and infant neurocognitive development. Psychosocial stress and obesity can each suppress fetal iron accrual. Their combined effects and differences by fetal sex are not known. In an observational pregnancy cohort study in Mexico City, we investigated associations of maternal prenatal life stressors, psychological dysfunction, and prepregnancy BMI with fetal iron status at delivery. OBJECTIVES: We hypothesized that greater maternal prenatal psychosocial stress and prepregnancy overweight and obesity are associated with lower cord blood ferritin and hemoglobin (Hb), with stronger associations in boys than girls. METHODS: Psychosocial stress in multiple domains of life stress (negative life events, perceived stress, exposure to violence) and psychological dysfunction symptoms (depression, generalized anxiety, and pregnancy-specific anxiety) were assessed with validated questionnaires during pregnancy. Prepregnancy BMI was predicted with a validated equation and categorized as normal/overweight/obese. Cord blood ferritin and Hb associations with prenatal psychosocial stress and BMI were modeled in multivariable linear regressions adjusted for maternal age, socioeconomic status, child sex, and prenatal iron supplementation. Interactions with child sex and 3-way stress-overweight/obesity-sex interactions were tested with product terms and likelihood ratio tests. RESULTS: In 493 dyads, median (IQR) cord blood ferritin and Hb concentrations were 185 µg/L (126–263 g/dL) and 16 g/dL (14.7–17.1 g/dL), respectively. Ferritin was lower in infants of mothers with higher prenatal perceived stress (−23%; 95% CI: −35%, −9%), violence exposure (−28%; 95% CI: −42%, −12%), anxiety symptoms (−16%; 95% CI: −27%, −4%), and obesity (−17%; 95% CI: −31%, 0.2%). Interaction models suggested sex differences and synergism between maternal stress and overweight/obesity. No associations were observed between stress or BMI and Hb. CONCLUSIONS: Multiple prenatal psychosocial stressors and excess prepregnancy BMI were each inversely associated with fetal iron status at birth. Pregnancies and infants at elevated risk of impaired fetal iron accrual may be identifiable according to observed synergism between maternal stress and obesity and differential associations with fetal iron status by infant sex.
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spelling pubmed-70263812020-02-25 Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status Campbell, Rebecca K Tamayo-Ortiz, Marcela Cantoral, Alejandra Schnaas, Lourdes Osorio-Valencia, Erika Wright, Rosalind J Téllez-Rojo, Martha M Wright, Robert O Curr Dev Nutr Original Research BACKGROUND: Iron accrued in utero is critical for fetal and infant neurocognitive development. Psychosocial stress and obesity can each suppress fetal iron accrual. Their combined effects and differences by fetal sex are not known. In an observational pregnancy cohort study in Mexico City, we investigated associations of maternal prenatal life stressors, psychological dysfunction, and prepregnancy BMI with fetal iron status at delivery. OBJECTIVES: We hypothesized that greater maternal prenatal psychosocial stress and prepregnancy overweight and obesity are associated with lower cord blood ferritin and hemoglobin (Hb), with stronger associations in boys than girls. METHODS: Psychosocial stress in multiple domains of life stress (negative life events, perceived stress, exposure to violence) and psychological dysfunction symptoms (depression, generalized anxiety, and pregnancy-specific anxiety) were assessed with validated questionnaires during pregnancy. Prepregnancy BMI was predicted with a validated equation and categorized as normal/overweight/obese. Cord blood ferritin and Hb associations with prenatal psychosocial stress and BMI were modeled in multivariable linear regressions adjusted for maternal age, socioeconomic status, child sex, and prenatal iron supplementation. Interactions with child sex and 3-way stress-overweight/obesity-sex interactions were tested with product terms and likelihood ratio tests. RESULTS: In 493 dyads, median (IQR) cord blood ferritin and Hb concentrations were 185 µg/L (126–263 g/dL) and 16 g/dL (14.7–17.1 g/dL), respectively. Ferritin was lower in infants of mothers with higher prenatal perceived stress (−23%; 95% CI: −35%, −9%), violence exposure (−28%; 95% CI: −42%, −12%), anxiety symptoms (−16%; 95% CI: −27%, −4%), and obesity (−17%; 95% CI: −31%, 0.2%). Interaction models suggested sex differences and synergism between maternal stress and overweight/obesity. No associations were observed between stress or BMI and Hb. CONCLUSIONS: Multiple prenatal psychosocial stressors and excess prepregnancy BMI were each inversely associated with fetal iron status at birth. Pregnancies and infants at elevated risk of impaired fetal iron accrual may be identifiable according to observed synergism between maternal stress and obesity and differential associations with fetal iron status by infant sex. Oxford University Press 2020-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7026381/ /pubmed/32099952 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzaa018 Text en Copyright © The Author(s) 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Research
Campbell, Rebecca K
Tamayo-Ortiz, Marcela
Cantoral, Alejandra
Schnaas, Lourdes
Osorio-Valencia, Erika
Wright, Rosalind J
Téllez-Rojo, Martha M
Wright, Robert O
Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status
title Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status
title_full Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status
title_fullStr Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status
title_full_unstemmed Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status
title_short Maternal Prenatal Psychosocial Stress and Prepregnancy BMI Associations with Fetal Iron Status
title_sort maternal prenatal psychosocial stress and prepregnancy bmi associations with fetal iron status
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7026381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32099952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzaa018
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