PUBLI : Ayesha Siddiqui, Elie Azria et al. « Maternal obesity and severe pre-eclampsia among immigrant women : a mediation analysis », Scientific reports, Mars 2020

  • Liste complète des auteurs:Ayesha Siddiqui, Cathe­rine Deneux-Tharaux, Domi­nique Luton,Thomas Schmitz, Laurent Mandel­brot, Candice Estellat, Eliza­beth A. Howell, Babak Khosh­nood, Nathalie Bertille & Elie Azria
  • Article en accès libre sur le site de la revue

Abstract

We inves­ti­gated the extent to which pre-pregnancy obesity mediates the asso­cia­tion between maternal place of birth and severe pre-eclampsia in the PreCARE cohort of pregnant women in Paris (n = 9,579). Adjusted path analysis logistic regres­sion models were used to assess the role of pre-pregnancy obesity as a mediator in the asso­cia­tion between maternal place of birth and the deve­lop­ment of severe pre-eclampsia. We calcu­lated 1. adjusted odds ratios and 95% confi­dence inter­vals for the total expo­sure-outcome asso­cia­tion and for the direct and indi­rect/o­be­sity-mediated compo­nents 2. the indi­rect/o­be­sity-mediated effect. Ninety-five (0.99%) women deve­loped severe pre-eclampsia, 47.6% were non-Euro­pean immi­grants, 16.3% were born in Sub-Saharan Africa, and 12.6% were obese (BMI > = 30 kg/​m2). Women expe­rien­cing severe pre-eclampsia were more likely to be from Sub-Saharan Africa (p = 0.023) and be obese (p = 0.048). Mothers from Sub-Saharan Africa had an increased risk of severe pre-eclampsia compared to Euro­pean-born mothers (aOR 2.53, 95% CI 1.39–4.58) and the obesity-mediated indi­rect effect was 18% of the total risk (aOR 1.18, 95%CI 1.03–1.35). In conclu­sion, Sub-Saharan African immi­grant women have a two-fold higher risk of deve­lo­ping severe pre-eclampsia as compared to Euro­pean-born women, one-fifth of which is mediated by pre-pregnancy obesity. Our results quan­tify the poten­tial benefit of decrea­sing obesity among at-risk women.