A systematic review of maternal smoking during pregnancy and fetal measurements with meta-analysis

Miriam Abraham(University of Aberdeen), Salem Alramadhan(University of Aberdeen), Carmen Íñiguez(Universitat Jaume I), Liesbeth Duijts(Erasmus MC), Vincent W. V. Jaddoe(Erasmus MC), Herman T. den Dekker(Erasmus MC), Sarah Crozier(University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust), Keith M. Godfrey(University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust), Peter C. Hindmarsh(University College London), Torstein Vik(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Geir Jacobsen(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Wojciech Hanke(Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine), Wojciech Sobala(Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine), Graham Devereux(University of Aberdeen), Steve Turner(University of Aberdeen)
PLoS ONE
February 23, 2017
Cited by 286Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Maternal smoking during pregnancy is linked to reduced birth weight but the gestation at onset of this relationship is not certain. We present a systematic review of the literature describing associations between maternal smoking during pregnancy and ultrasound measurements of fetal size, together with an accompanying meta-analysis. METHODS: Studies were selected from electronic databases (OVID, EMBASE and Google Scholar) that examined associations between maternal smoking or smoke exposure and antenatal fetal ultrasound measurements. Outcome measures were first, second or third trimester fetal measurements. RESULTS: There were 284 abstracts identified, 16 papers were included in the review and the meta-analysis included data from eight populations. Maternal smoking was associated with reduced second trimester head size (mean reduction 0.09 standard deviation (SD) [95% CI 0.01, 0.16]) and femur length (0.06 [0.01, 0.10]) and reduced third trimester head size (0.18 SD [0.13, 0.23]), femur length (0.27 SD [0.21, 0.32]) and estimated fetal weight (0.18 SD [0.11, 0.24]). Higher maternal cigarette consumption was associated with a lower z score for head size in the second (mean difference 0.09 SD [0, 0.19]) and third (0.15 SD [0.03, 0.26]) trimesters compared to lower consumption. Fetal measurements were not reduced for those whose mothers quit before or after becoming pregnant compared to mothers who had never smoked. CONCLUSIONS: Maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated with reduced fetal measurements after the first trimester, particularly reduced head size and femur length. These effects may be attenuated if mothers quit or reduce cigarette consumption during pregnancy.


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