• Title of article

    Serum Caffeine and Paraxanthine as Markers for Reported Caffeine Intake in Pregnancy

  • Author/Authors

    Mark A. Klebanoff MD، نويسنده , , MPH، نويسنده , , Richard J. Levine MD، نويسنده , , MPH، نويسنده , , Rebecca Dersimonian ScD، نويسنده , , John D. Clemens MD، نويسنده , , Diana G. Wilkins PhD، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    107
  • To page
    111
  • Abstract
    PURPOSE: Previous studies of maternal caffeine use and pregnancy outcome have relied on self-reported use. Even if these were perfectly accurate, inter-individual differences in caffeine metabolism result in a relatively weak correlation between caffeine intake and serum concentration. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the serum concentration of caffeine or its primary metabolite, paraxanthine, obtained at an unknown time during working hours, is useful to distinguish between pregnant women who report consuming small and large amounts of caffeine. METHODS: We selected from the Birmingham fetal growth study 60 women with normal pregnancy outcomes who reported consuming less-than-or-equals, slant 0.8 mg/kg/day of caffeine in a 24-hour dietary recall, 60 who consumed 0.81–2.5 mg/kg/day, 60 who consumed 2.51–5.0 mg/kg/day and 59 who consumed greater-or-equal, slanted 5.01 mg/kg/day. These women had serum drawn for storage during regular clinic hours on the same day as the recall interview. Caffeine and paraxanthine were measured in the stored serum using high performance liquid chromatography. RESULTS: The weighted kappa coefficient between strata of caffeine intake and quartiles of serum paraxanthine was 0.58 among smokers and 0.53 among nonsmokers, versus 0.44 and 0.51, respectively, for quartiles of serum caffeine. The Pearson correlation coefficient between intake and paraxanthine was 0.50 for smokers and 0.53 for nonsmokers, and 0.37 and 0.51, respectively, for serum caffeine. These values are comparable to the correlation between reported smoking and serum cotinine in pregnancy. CONCLUSIONS: The serum concentrations of paraxanthine, and to a lesser degree, caffeine are useful to distinguish between women with varying levels of caffeine intake.
  • Keywords
    serum , Biological markers , caffeine , Markers , Pregnancy.
  • Journal title
    Annals of Epidemiology
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    Annals of Epidemiology
  • Record number

    461573