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Citation

Evenson, Kelly R.; Mowla, Sanjida; Olshan, Andrew F.; Shaw, Gary M.; Ailes, Elizabeth C.; Reefhuis, Jennita; Joshi, Neha; & Desrosiers, Tania A. (2023). Maternal Physical Activity, Sitting, and Risk of Non-Cardiac Birth Defects. Pediatric Research, 95(1), 334-341.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The relationship between maternal physical activity (PA)/sitting and birth defects is largely unexplored. We examined whether pre-pregnancy PA/sitting were associated with having a pregnancy affected by a birth defect.
METHODS: We used data from two United States population-based case-control studies: 2008-2011 deliveries from the National Birth Defects Prevention Study (NBDPS; 9 states) and 2014-2018 deliveries from the Birth Defects Study To Evaluate Pregnancy exposureS (BD-STEPS; 7 states). Cases with one of 12 non-cardiac birth defects (nā€‰=ā€‰3798) were identified through population-based registries. Controls (nā€‰=ā€‰2682) were live-born infants without major birth defects randomly sampled using vital/hospital records. Mothers self-reported pre-pregnancy PA/sitting. Unconditional logistic regression models estimated associations between PA/sitting categories and the 12 birth defects.
RESULTS: Mothers engaging in pre-pregnancy PA was associated with a reduced odds of five (spina bifida, cleft palate, anorectal atresia, hypospadias, transverse limb deficiency) and a higher odds of two (anencephaly, gastroschisis) birth defects. Mothers spending less time sitting in pre-pregnancy was associated with a reduced odds of two (anorectal atresia, hypospadias) and a higher odds of one (cleft lip with or without cleft palate) birth defect.
CONCLUSIONS: Reasonable next steps include replication of these findings, improved exposure assessment, and elucidation of biologic mechanisms.
IMPACT: Using data from two population-based case-control studies, we found that mothers engaging in different types of physical activity in the 3 months before pregnancy had an infant with a reduced odds of five and a higher odds of two birth defects. Mothers spending less time sitting in the 3 months before pregnancy had an infant with a reduced odds of two and a higher odds of one birth defect. Clarification and confirmation from additional studies are needed using more precise exposure measures, distinguishing occupational from leisure-time physical activity, and elucidation of mechanisms supporting these associations.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41390-023-02768-y

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2023

Journal Title

Pediatric Research

Author(s)

Evenson, Kelly R.
Mowla, Sanjida
Olshan, Andrew F.
Shaw, Gary M.
Ailes, Elizabeth C.
Reefhuis, Jennita
Joshi, Neha
Desrosiers, Tania A.

Article Type

Regular

Data Set/Study

National Birth Defects Prevention Study (NBDPS)
Birth Defects Study To Evaluate Pregnancy exposureS (BD-STEPS)

Continent/Country

United States

State

Nonspecific

Sex/Gender

Women

ORCiD

Olshan - 0000-0001-9115-5128