Publications by authors named "Hutcheon J"

Low iron stores at birth may adversely influence child cognitive and motor development. The aims of this study were to assess cord blood iron levels and explore maternal and neonatal factors associated with iron status. Cord blood specimens (=46) were obtained from the BC Children's Hospital BioBank in Vancouver, Canada.

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  • Chronic or gestational hypertension affects about 7% of pregnancies, and the WILL Trial aimed to find the best timing for delivery to improve outcomes for mothers and babies.
  • The trial involved women with hypertension at 36 to 37 weeks gestation who were randomly assigned to either an early delivery intervention at 38 weeks or usual care at term, analyzing maternal and neonatal outcomes.
  • Despite aiming for 540 participants, the trial ended early with only 403 participants due to slow recruitment, showing no significant difference in poor maternal outcomes between the two groups, while deliveries in the intervention group occurred about 0.9 weeks earlier.
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  • The study focuses on developing a diagnostic model using Quantitative Ultrasound (QUS) to predict pre-eclampsia (PE) and small-for-gestational-age (SGA) outcomes in pregnancies.
  • Researchers collected placenta samples and ultrasound data from women who had cesarean deliveries, measuring key parameters like attenuation and backscatter to create a logistic regression model.
  • The resulting model showed strong predictive ability, with an Area Under the Curve (AUROC) of 0.89, indicating its effectiveness, and future research aims to validate the model with in-utero QUS data.
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Pregnancy weight gain standards are charts describing percentiles of weight gain among participants with no risk factors that could adversely affect weight gain. This detailed information is burdensome to collect. We investigated the extent to which exclusion of various pre-pregnancy, pregnancy and postpartum factors impacted the values of pregnancy weight gain percentiles.

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Dietary supplements including vitamins, minerals, and natural health products are commonly consumed by those aiming to optimize fertility and pregnancy outcomes. The aim of this survey was to describe supplementation practices among individuals who were pregnant or trying to conceive in Vancouver, Canada. An online survey was conducted among 500 individuals who were pregnant ( = 250) or trying to conceive ( = 250).

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Importance: Acute respiratory tract infections are the leading cause of emergency department visits and hospitalizations in US children, with highest risks in the first 2 months after birth. Out-of-home childcare settings increase the spread of respiratory tract infections. The study team hypothesized that access to state-paid family leave could reduce acute care encounters (hospital admissions or emergency department visits) for respiratory tract infections in young infants by reducing out-of-home childcare transmissions.

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  • * Analyzing over 2 million hospital deliveries, researchers found an overall epilepsy prevalence of 8.1 per 1,000 live births, with higher rates in boys, preterm births, and children from deprived backgrounds.
  • * Results showed a slight increase in epilepsy cases diagnosed by age 8 between children born in 2002 and those born in 2012, while disparities by gestational age and socioeconomic factors remained consistent over time.
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Background: The current Institute of Medicine (IOM) pregnancy weight gain guidelines were developed using the best available evidence but were limited by substantial knowledge gaps. Some have raised concern that the guidelines for individuals affected by overweight or obesity are too high and contribute to short- and long-term complications for the mother and child.

Objectives: To determine the association between pregnancy weight gain below the lower limit of the current IOM recommendations and risk of 10 adverse maternal and child health outcomes among individuals with overweight and obesity.

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Background: High gestational weight gain is associated with excess postpartum weight retention, yet excess postpartum weight retention is not an exclusion criterion for current gestational weight gain charts. We aimed to assess the impact of excluding individuals with high interpregnancy weight change (a proxy for excess postpartum weight retention) on gestational weight gain distributions.

Methods: We included individuals with an index birth from 2008 to 2014 and a subsequent birth before 2019, in the population-based Stockholm-Gotland Perinatal Cohort.

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Background: There are concerns that current gestational weight gain recommendations for women with obesity are too high and that guidelines should differ on the basis of severity of obesity. In this study we investigated the safety of gestational weight gain below current recommendations or weight loss in pregnancies with obesity, and evaluated whether separate guidelines are needed for different obesity classes.

Methods: In this population-based cohort study, we used electronic medical records from the Stockholm-Gotland Perinatal Cohort study to identify pregnancies with obesity (early pregnancy BMI before 14 weeks' gestation ≥30 kg/m) among singleton pregnancies that delivered between Jan 1, 2008, and Dec 31, 2015.

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  • Existing gestational weight gain (GWG) charts have varying inclusion/exclusion criteria, affecting their percentile values for weight gain during pregnancy.
  • This study analyzed 31 datasets to determine how including or excluding pregnancies with adverse outcomes, like low birth weight or preterm birth, impacts GWG charts.
  • Results showed minimal differences in GWG trajectories, particularly for those with normal weight, while some slight variations were observed for overweight individuals, but overall, the impact of exclusion was insignificant.
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Background: Affecting 2-4% of pregnancies, pre-eclampsia is a leading cause of maternal death and morbidity worldwide. Using routinely available data, we aimed to develop and validate a novel machine learning-based and clinical setting-responsive time-of-disease model to rule out and rule in adverse maternal outcomes in women presenting with pre-eclampsia.

Methods: We used health system, demographic, and clinical data from the day of first assessment with pre-eclampsia to predict a Delphi-derived composite outcome of maternal mortality or severe morbidity within 2 days.

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Objective: To estimate the effect of antenatal corticosteroids on newborn respiratory morbidity in twins.

Design: Regression discontinuity applied to population-based birth registry data.

Setting: British Columbia, Canada, 2008-2018.

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Accurate identification of fetal growth restriction in fetal autopsy is critical for assessing causes of death. We examined the impact of using a chart derived from ultrasound measurements of healthy fetuses (World Health Organization fetal growth chart) versus a chart commonly used by pathologists (Archie et al.) derived from fetal autopsy-based populations in diagnosing small-for-gestational-age (SGA) birth in perinatal deaths.

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Background: The Institute of Medicine pregnancy weight gain guidelines were developed without evidence linking high weight gain to maternal cardiometabolic disease and child obesity. The upper limit of current recommendations may be too high for the health of the pregnant individual and child.

Objectives: The aim of this study was to identify the range of pregnancy weight gain for pregnancies within a normal body mass index (BMI) range that balances the risks of high and low weight gain by simultaneously considering 10 different health conditions.

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Background: The Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine recommends defining fetal growth restriction as an estimated fetal weight or abdominal circumference <10th percentile of a population-based reference. However, because multiple references are available, an understanding of their ability to identify infants at increased risk due to fetal growth restriction is critical. Previous studies have focused on the ability of different population references to identify short-term outcomes, but fetal growth restriction also has longer-term consequences for child development.

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Folic acid supplementation is recommended during pregnancy to support healthy fetal development; (6)-5-methyltetrahydrofolic acid ((6)-5-MTHF) is available in some commercial prenatal vitamins as an alternative to folic acid, but its effect on blood folate status during pregnancy is unknown. To address this, we randomised sixty pregnant individuals at 8-21 weeks' gestation to 0·6 mg/d folic acid or (6)-5-MTHF × 16 weeks. Fasting blood specimens were collected at baseline and after 16 weeks (endline).

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Placental pathology assessment following delivery provides an opportunity to identify the presence and type of disease that can mediate major obstetrical complications, especially in cases where the fetus is growth-restricted, born premature, or stillborn, or if the mother suffers from severe hypertensive morbidities [...

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Folic acid supplementation is recommended perinatally, but may increase unmetabolized folic acid (UMFA) in human milk; this is concerning as it is an inactive form which may be less bioavailable for the infant. "Natural" (6S)-5-methyltetrahydrofolic acid [(6S)-5-MTHF] is available as an alternative to folic acid, and may prevent the accumulation of UMFA in human milk. Pregnant women (n = 60) were enrolled at 8-21 weeks of gestation and randomized to 0.

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