Weight gain and diabetes in pregnancy
National Institute Of Diabetes And Digestive And Kidney Diseases
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Abstract
Prevention of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). We examined the effect of lifestyle (diet and physical activity) interventions on the prevalence of GDM, considering the method of GDM ascertainment and its association with early pregnancy characteristics and maternal and neonatal outcomes in the LIFE-Moms consortium. LIFE-Moms evaluated the effects of lifestyle interventions to optimize gestational weight gain in 1148 pregnant women with BMI 25 kg/m2 and without known diabetes at enrollment, compared with standard care. GDM was assessed between 24 and 31-weeks gestation by a 2-hour, 75-gram OGTT or by local clinical practice standards. Lifestyle interventions initiated prior to 16 weeks reduced early excess GWG compared with standard care (0.35 0.24 vs 0.43 0.26 kg per week, p=<0.0001) but did not affect GDM diagnosis (11.1% vs 11.6%, p = 0.91). Using the 75-gram, 2-hour OGTT, 13.0% of standard care and 11.0% of the intervention group had GDM by the IADPSG criteria (p = 0.45). The type of diagnostic test did not change the result. Women who developed GDM were significantly heavier, more likely to have obesity, and more likely to have dysglycemia at baseline. In conclusion, moderate-to-high intensity lifestyle interventions grounded in behavior change theory initiated between 9 and 16-weeks gestation did not affect the prevalence of GDM despite reducing early GWG.
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