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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Apr 1.
Published in final edited form as: Pregnancy Hypertens. 2020 Mar 3;20:50–55. doi: 10.1016/j.preghy.2020.03.001

Table 4:

Association of weight change with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, with sample limited to women whose diagnosis of a hypertensive disorder occurred following all study visits.

Variable Hypertensive disorder of pregnancy (N = 1,456) No Hypertensive disorder of pregnancy (N = 6,732) P valuea Unadjusted incidence rate ratio 95 % confidence interval Adjusted incidence rate ratiob 95% confidence interval
Early weight change (IOM category): 0.01
 Inadequate 389 (26.7) 2,030 (30.2) 0.92 0.80 – 1.07 0.89 0.77 – 1.04
 Adequate 337 (23.2) 1,600 (23.8) (ref) (ref)
 Excessive 730 (50.1) 3,102 (46.1) 1.09 0.63 – 1.25 0.95 0.83 – 1.08
Mid weight change (IOM category): < 0.001
 Inadequate 544 (37.4) 2,794 (41.5) 1.04 0.89 – 1.21 1.02 0.87 – 1.19
 Adequate 232 (15.9) 1,244 (18.5) (ref) (ref)
 Excessive 680 (46.7) 2,694 (40.0) 1.28 1.10 – 1.49 1.14 1.01 – 1.33
Late weight change (IOM category): < 0.001
 Inadequate 167 (11.5) 1,091 (16.2) 0.93 0.75 – 1.15 0.79 0.63 – 0.99
 Adequate 163 (11.2) 979 (14.5) (ref) (ref)
 Excessive 1,126 (77.3) 4,662 (69.3) 1.36 1.16 – 1.61 1.21 1.02 – 1.43
a

P value for t tests for continuous variables, chi square tests for categorical variables.

b

In addition to the factors listed here, multivariable models also adjusted for maternal BMI at first visit, maternal age at first visit, maternal race, maternal education, insurance status, gravidity, smoking within 3 months of pregnancy, and maternal diabetes, all of which were significant at the p < 0.10 level with either weight gain or hypertensive disorders in bivariable analyses, but not in multivariable analyses. These incidence rate ratios also account for fixed effects by study site and subsite.