Association between maternal passive smoking and increased risk of delivering small-for-gestational-age infants at full-term using plasma cotinine levels from The Hokkaido Study : a prospective birth cohort

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Objectives: To investigate the association between plasma cotinine level measured at the 8th gestational month and the delivery of small-for-gestational-age (SGA) infants, using a highly sensitive ELISA method. Design: Prospective birth cohort study from The Hokkaido Study on Environment and Children's Health. Setting: Hokkaido, Japan. Participants: Our sample included 15 198 mother-infant pairs enrolled in 2003-2012. Main outcome measures: SGA, defined as a gestational age-specific weight Z-score below -2. Results: The number of SGA infants was 192 (1.3%). The cotinine cut-off level that differentiated SGA infants from other infants was 3.03 ng/mL for both the total population and the full-term births subgroup (sensitivity 0.307; positive predictive value 2.3%). Compared with infants of mothers with a plasma cotinine level of <3.03 ng/mL, infants of mothers with a plasma cotinine level of ≥3.03 ng/mL showed an increased OR for SGA in the total population and the full-term infant group (2.02(95% CI 1.45 to 2.83) and 2.44(95% CI 1.73 to 3.44), respectively). Conclusion: A plasma cotinine level of ≥3.03 ng/mL, which included both passive and active smokers, was associated with an increased risk of SGA. This finding is of important relevance when educating pregnant women about avoiding prenatal passive and active smoking due to the adverse effects on their infants, even those born at full-term.

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  • BMJ Open

    BMJ Open 9 (2), e023200-, 2019-02

    BMJ Publishing Group

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