Clinical Questions List
Factors that Affect Postpartum BMI Gain or Loss

CQ #273 - April 19, 2023

by Anne Eglash MD, IBCLC, FABM

#LactFact

Women with a pre-pregnancy BMI of 25-29.9 experience the greatest impact from lactation on BMI loss by 1 year postpartum, when compared to nonlactating women.

Factors Affecting BMI Changes in Mothers during the First Year Postpartum
Nutrients 2023, 15(6), 1364
What are the factors that determine weight loss or weight retention postpartum?

It has been unclear whether lactation facilitates postpartum weight loss, as the research findings have been mixed. There seem to be several factors associated with changes in postpartum BMI, such as race, income, education, and pre-pregnancy BMI.

The researchers for this study hypothesized that lactating mothers would have a different trajectory of postpartum BMI changes as compared to mothers who never lactated, and that it might depend on the individual’s pre-pregnancy BMI status and their eating behaviors.

The researchers evaluated BMI gain or loss during the first year postpartum among 208 women by evaluating their lactation history, pre-pregnancy BMI, various demographic factors, and their eating behavior (e.g. dietary restraint, disinhibition, and susceptibility to hunger). Among the 208 subjects, 96 lactated for at least 4.5 months, with 62% having lactated for 1 year, and 112 exclusively formula fed. All subjects were categorized into pre-pregnancy BMI categories as follows: Healthy (≤ 24.9 kg/m2), Overweight (25-29.9 kg/m2), and Obese (≥ 30.0 kg/m2).

They obtained BMI measurements from each subject 8-13 times during the first year postpartum.

They found that the effect of lactation on postpartum BMI depended on psychological eating behavior traits, with greater BMI loss among those with higher dietary restraint, higher disinhibition, and lower susceptibility to hunger.

The effect of lactation on change in postpartum BMI also depended on the pre-pregnancy BMI. For more information, see the question!

What was the association between lactation, pre-pregnancy BMI, and postpartum BMI loss or gain? Choose 1 or more:
  1. Among all subjects (lactating and nonlactating), those in the pre-pregnancy Overweight BMI category lost less BMI and at slower rates than subjects in the pre-pregnancy Healthy BMI category.
  2. On average, BMI increased at 1 year postpartum among all subjects (lactating and nonlactating) in the pre-pregnancy Obese BMI category.
  3. BMI loss or gain was similar between lactating and nonlactating women at one year postpartum if their pre-pregnancy BMI was Healthy or Obese.
  4. Subjects who practiced dietary restraint postpartum had significantly more BMI loss by 1 year postpartum, no matter the BMI category.

Click here to view the answer to this question.

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