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Original Articles

The independent and combined influences of small for gestational age and socioeconomic status on newborn metabolite levels

, , , , &
Pages 6192-6198 | Received 23 Aug 2020, Accepted 24 Mar 2021, Published online: 21 Apr 2021
 

Abstract

Objectives

To determine whether socioeconomic status (SES) and small birthweight for gestational age (SGA) exhibit independent or joint effects on infant levels of 42 metabolites.

Study design

Population-based retrospective cohort of metabolic newborn screening information linked to hospital discharge data. SGA infants defined by birthweight <10th percentile for gestational age by sex. SES was determined by a combined metric including education level, participation in the WIC nutritional assistance program, and receiving California MediCal insurance. We performed linear regression to determine the effects of SES independently, SGA independently, and the interaction of SGA and SES on 42 newborn metabolite levels.

Results

736,435 California infants born in 2005–2011 were included in the analysis. SGA was significantly associated with 36 metabolites. SES was significantly associated with 41 of 42 metabolites. Thirty-eight metabolites exhibited a dose-response relationship between SGA and metabolite levels as SES worsened. Fourteen metabolites showed significant interaction between SES and SGA. Eight metabolites showed significant individual and joint effects of SES and SGA: alanine, glycine, free carnitine, C-3DC, C-5DC, C-16:1, C-18:1, and C-18:2.

Conclusions

SES and SGA exhibited independent effects on a majority of metabolites and joint effects on select metabolites. A better understanding of how SES and SGA status are related to infant metabolites may help identify maternal and newborn interventions that can lead to better outcomes for infants born SGA.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was completed with funding from the University of California San Francisco Preterm Birth Initiative (PTBi), San Francisco, CA.

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