Original Articles
Practical Approaches for Estimating Prepregnant Body Weight

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0091-2182(97)00159-6Get rights and content

Abstract

Measurements of prepregnant body weight have important research and clinical applications. In practice, however, they are not always recorded; even when they are, this information is not always readily available. For this reason, researchers and clinicians have to rely on retrospective estimates of prepregnant weight, which can be estimated using: 1) maternal self-reports, 2) retrospective extrapolation, or 3) standardized estimates that correct for weight gained during early pregnancy. The aim of the present study was to examine the relative merits of these three approaches. Maternal self-reports tend to be unreliable and biased, being influenced by a variety of sociodemographic characteristics that generally underestimate true prepregnant body weight. Estimates of prepregnant weight based on retrospective extrapolation are vulnerable to measurement error, transient fluctuations in body weight, and incorrectly assume that the rate of weight gain is constant throughout pregnancy. Standardized estimates that correct for weight gained during early pregnancy incorrectly presume that there is little interindividual variation in gestational weight gain and that weight gain is similar for each woman in consecutive pregnancies. Because none of these techniques can provide a precise measure of prepregnant weight, researchers have little alternative but to recruit and weigh women before they become pregnant, although measurements of body weight recorded during the first trimester of pregnancy may provide a reasonable indication of prepregnant weight. For clinicians, self-reports of prepregnant weight or measurements recorded early in pregnancy are probably sufficiently accurate for practical purposes whenever recent, accurate measurements of prepregnant weight are unavailable.

Section snippets

Techniques for Retrospectively Estimating Prepregnant Body Weight

Prepregnant body weight can be estimated retrospectively using 1) maternal self-reports, 2) retrospective extrapolation, and 3) standardized estimates that correct for weight gain during early pregnancy.

For Researchers

Researchers who need accurate measurements of prepregnant body weight have little alternative but to recruit and weigh women before they become pregnant. In practice, recruiting a representative sample of women before they become pregnant is difficult, as evidenced by the small sample sizes of the studies examined in Fig. 1. However, none of the techniques examined here provide a suitably accurate alternative: retrospective self-reports are unreliable and individual biases are difficult to

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the maternity services staff at the South Thames National Health Service Trust where our repeat-pregnancy study was conducted for their cooperation and invaluable assistance. Special thanks are extended to the Deputy Manager of Medical Records for helping to access the obstetric records used. Financial support was provided by the DevR fund of the University of Greenwich.

Helen Harris was a doctoral research assistant within the Maternal and Child Health Research Programme at the University of Greenwich in London. She has recently completed a study that investigated whether pregnancy predisposes parous women to obesity, and she is now setting up a national register of hepatitis C infection at the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, within the United Kingdom Public Health Laboratory Service in London.

References (37)

  • E Forsum et al.

    Estimation of body fat in healthy Swedish women during pregnancy and lactation

    Am J Clin Nutr

    (1989)
  • JMA Van Raaij et al.

    Body fat mass and basal metabolic rate in Dutch women before, during and after pregnancya reappraisal of energy cost of pregnancy

    Am J Clin Nutr

    (1989)
  • GR Goldberg et al.

    Longitudinal assessment of energy expenditure in pregnancy by the doubly labelled water method

    Am J Clin Nutr

    (1993)
  • B Abrams et al.

    Maternal weight gain and preterm delivery

    Obstet Gynecol

    (1989)
  • DS Seidman et al.

    The effect of maternal weight gain in pregnancy on birth weight

    Obstet Gynecol

    (1989)
  • Nutrition during pregnancy

    (1990)
  • World Health Organization. Maternal anthropometry and pregnancy outcomes: a WHO collaborative study. Bull WHO 1995;73...
  • LH Lumley

    Screening for preterm delivery and low birth weight using maternal height and weight

  • Cited by (0)

    Helen Harris was a doctoral research assistant within the Maternal and Child Health Research Programme at the University of Greenwich in London. She has recently completed a study that investigated whether pregnancy predisposes parous women to obesity, and she is now setting up a national register of hepatitis C infection at the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, within the United Kingdom Public Health Laboratory Service in London.

    View full text