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Does the impact of a plant-based diet during pregnancy on birth weight differ by ethnicity? A dietary pattern analysis from a prospective Canadian birth cohort alliance
Zulyniak, Michael A.; de Souza, Russell J.; Shaikh, Mateen; Desai, Dipika; Lefebvre, Diana L.; Gupta, Milan; Wilson, Julie; Wahi, Gita; Subbarao, Padmaja; Becker, Allan B.; Mandhane, Piush; Turvey, Stuart E.; Beyene, Joseph; Atkinson, Stephanie; Morrison, Katherine M.; McDonald, Sarah; Teo, Koon K.; Sears, Malcolm R.; Anand, Sonia S.; NutriGen Alliance investigators
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: Birth weight is an indicator of newborn health and a strong predictor of health outcomes in later life. Significant variation in diet during pregnancy between ethnic groups in high-income countries provides an ideal opportunity to investigate the influence of maternal diet on birth weight. SETTING: Four multiethnic birth cohorts based in Canada (the NutriGen Alliance). PARTICIPANTS: 3997 full-term mother-infant pairs of diverse ethnic groups who had principal component analysis-derived diet pattern scores-plant-based, Western and health-conscious-and birth weight data. RESULTS: No associations were identified between the Western and health-conscious diet patterns and birth weight; however, the plant-based dietary pattern was inversely associated with birth weight (β=-67.6 g per 1-unit increase; P<0.001), and an interaction with non-white ethnicity and birth weight was observed. Ethnically stratified analyses demonstrated that among white Europeans, maternal consumption of a plant-based diet associated with lower birth weight (β=-65.9 g per 1-unit increase; P
Automatic Tags
Female; Humans; Adult; Young Adult; Energy Intake; Diet, Vegetarian; Pregnancy; Food; nutrition; Diet, Western; Asian Continental Ancestry Group; European Continental Ancestry Group; Birth Weight; Diet, Healthy; Cooking; birth weight; Canada; diet pattern; Fetal Macrosomia; Infant, Small for Gestational Age; PCA; Term Birth
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