Association of pre-pregnancy body mass index and rate of weight gain during pregnancy with maternal indicators of cardiometabolic risk

Abstract Background/objective Changes in metabolism and extensive hemodynamic adjustments occur during normal pregnancy. The presence of maternal obesity imposes an overload to these physiological adaptations that may result in increased risk for the development of cardiometabolic complications duri...

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Autores principales: Luz Isabel Omaña-Guzmán, Luis Ortiz-Hernández, Mónica Ancira-Moreno, Vanesa Morales-Hernández, Marie S. O’Neill, Felipe Vadillo-Ortega
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/561fb7631c6245c68df0837cb94fff21
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Sumario:Abstract Background/objective Changes in metabolism and extensive hemodynamic adjustments occur during normal pregnancy. The presence of maternal obesity imposes an overload to these physiological adaptations that may result in increased risk for the development of cardiometabolic complications during and after pregnancy. The aim of this study is to describe total cholesterol (TC), triglycerides (TG), glucose, and arterial blood pressure (BP) trajectories and to analyze the association of these cardiometabolic risk indicators during pregnancy with pre-pregnancy body mass index (pBMI) and monthly gestational weight gain (MGWG). Subjects/methods A prospective cohort study of pregnant women was conducted in Mexico City. Monthly samples of blood were taken during clinical follow-up and biochemical and blood pressure were measured during each visit. Adjusted linear mixed-effect regression models were fit to describe the trajectories of these biomarkers during pregnancy and to analyze the association with pBMI and MGWG. Results Seven hundred and twenty women were included of which 16.6% had pre-gestational obesity, 33.2% had pre-gestational overweight, 45.8% had normal pBMI and 4.4% had pre-gestational underweight. Women with pre-gestational obesity had higher lipids concentrations in the beginning of pregnancy (TC: $$\hat \beta$$ β ̂ = 33.08, p = 0.010; TG: $$\hat \beta$$ β ̂ = 31.29, p = <0.001) but the concentrations increased less than in women with normal pBMI (TC: $$\hat \beta$$ β ̂ = −14.18, p = 0.001; TG: $$\hat \beta$$ β ̂ = −5.42, p < 0.001). By the end of pregnancy, women with pre-gestational obesity had lower concentrations of lipids than women with normal pBMI. By contrast, women with pre-gestational obesity had higher glucose concentrations and higher BP levels than women with normal pBMI over pregnancy. Conclusions pBMI is differentially associated with longitudinal trajectories of maternal biochemical markers of cardiometabolic risk. MGWG did not significantly affect the biochemical indicators or BP trajectories. Our results suggest that pBMI is more relevant to predicting adverse cardiometabolic markers trajectories during pregnancy than MGWG.