Ds. Seidman et al., MACROSOMIA DOES NOT PREDICT OVERWEIGHT IN LATE ADOLESCENCE IN INFANTSOF DIABETIC MOTHERS, Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica, 77(1), 1998, pp. 58-62
Objective. To determine the predictive value of macrosomia for overwei
ght later in adult life in infants of diabetic mothers. Design. Data f
rom the computerized records of the Jerusalem Perinatal Study were mat
ched to measurements made al age 17 obtained from the military draft m
edical examination records. Participants. 10,891 infants born in Jerus
alem between November 1974 and February 1976. Main outcome measures. M
acrosomia based on 90th percentile birth weight for gestational age an
d overweight defined as the 90th percentile for body mass index at age
17. Results. Diabetes was diagnosed in 87 (0.8%) of the mothers. Thir
ty-one (35.6%) of the infants of the diabetic mothers were macrosomic
compared to 1012 (9.4%) of the siblings of nondiabetic mothers (p<0.00
1). At 17 years of age 10.3% vs. 9.4% of the siblings of diabetic vs.
nondiabetic mothers were overweight (p>0.05). The rare of adolescent o
verweight in macrosomic vs. nonmacrosomic subjects was 12.3% vs. 9.7%
(p<0.01) in siblings of nondiabetic mothers. and 16.1% vs. 7.1% (p>0.0
5) for diabetic mothers. The sensitivity and specificity, in diabetic
mothers, of macrosomia for overweight at age 17 was 44.4% and 66.7%, r
espectively. The positive and negative predictive value of macrosomia
for overweight at age 17 was 16.1% and 92.9%, respectively. Conclusion
s. The risk of adolescent overweight was significantly increased among
macrosomic infants, although this trend did not reach statistical sig
nificance in the smaller group of infants born to diabetic mothers. Ma
crosomia among infants of diabetic mothers had little predictive value
for overweight in late adolescence.