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![Page 1: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Dietary interventions in
Obese Pregnancy:
An Australian study and systematic review of the literature
Professor Julie Quinlivan
![Page 2: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Prevalence
In Australia and New Zealand,
35% of women presenting for antenatal care are overweight or obese
Ball K et al, Pub Hlth Nutr 2003; Lederman SA. Obstet Gynecol 1993; Gunderson & Abrams Epidemiol Rev 2000.
![Page 3: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Prevalence
So we have more women than ever PRESENTING for antenatal care who are overweight or obese
This is then compounded by women PUTTING ON more weight in pregnancy than required.
Ball K et al, Pub Hlth Nutr 2003; Lederman SA. Obstet Gynecol 1993; Gunderson & Abrams Epidemiol Rev 2000.
![Page 4: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
2. Increasing weight gain in pregnancy
The excess weight gain in pregnancy is FAT women must lose afterwards.
NHMRC (Australia) Clinical Practice Guidelines for the management of overweight and obesity in adults, Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra, 2003.; Lederman SA. Obstet Gynecol 1993; 82: 148-55; Hytten and Chamberlerein , Clinical psychology in Obstetrics. Blackwell Scientific Publications: Oxford, 1980; Linne Y. Obesity reviews 2004; Chesley and Weight changes and water balance in normal and toxic pregnancy. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1944; 48: 565-593. Bongain , Euro J Obstet Gynaecol Repro Biol 1998.
Period Mean weight gain in pregnancy
1960-1970 8.5-10kg
1980-1990 9-11kg
1990-2000 10-14kg
2000-2010 13-15kg
![Page 5: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
NHMRC (Aust) reports that young adult women are at particular risk of weight gain.
Childbirth is a particular risk.
Up to 20% of women gain >5kg by 6 months postpartum.
Ball K et al, Pub Hlth Nutr 2003; Lederman SA. Obstet Gynecol 1993; Gunderson & Abrams Epidemiol Rev 2000.
Ref: 2B blog spot.com
![Page 6: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Implications of obesity
Increased pre-pregnancy weight and weight gain during pregnancy ADVERSELY increases:* Gestational diabetes;* Macrosomia;* Preterm;* Postdates;* Operative delivery;* Hypertension;* Infections; * Clotting disorders.
![Page 7: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
What is the impact of maternal BMI on GDM?
25-30 31-40 40+
Rate of GDM
2-5% 7-12% 17-25%
Example: GDM
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The obesity epidemic and an increase in pregnancy weight gain have increased gestational diabetes.....
![Page 9: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
.....and then, along comes evidence that we have been under diagnosing gestational diabetes to the detriment of women and their babies.
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Hyperglycaemia and Adverse Pregnancy
Outcomes study.
It found that there was a CONTINUOUS relationship between blood glucose and adverse neonatal and maternal outcomes.
The trial suggested that new guidelines were required to diagnose GDM.Cur Opinion Obstet Gynecol 2011; 23(2): 72-5.
HAPO
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Two large RCT implementing treatment at old diagnostic criteria for GDM versus the new HAPO criteria for GDM
Both RCT found SIGNIFICANT IMPROVEMENTS in MATERNAL and NEONATAL outcomes with the treatment of GDM under the new HAPO guidelines.Cur Opinion Obstet Gynecol 2011; 23(2): 72-5.
The Randomised trials
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Birth weight >90th centile
Cord blood C-peptide >90th centile
Caesarean section
Neonatal hypoglycaemia
Pre eclampsia
Preterm birth
Shoulder dystocia
Birth injury
NICU admission
HyperbilirubinaemiaAnnals New York Acad Science 2010; 1205:88-93
Significant improvements
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International association of diabetes and pregnancy study groups (IADPSG) recommendation:
All pregnant women should be offered a 75g oral GTT between 24-28 weeks gestation.
An ABNORMAL result is any one of the following:
Fasting 5.1 g/dL (92mg/dL)
1 hr 10.0 g/dL (180mg/dL)
2 hr 8.5 g/dL (153mg/dL)
Post HAPO
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New guidelines and workload
All GTT results from SW and N/Sydney analysed by old and HAPO criteria.
They found an INCREASE in workload
29-32%
ANZJOG 2010; 50(5): 439-43.
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Options
So we need interventions in pregnancy directed towards obese women that aim to restrict weight gain in pregnancy to IOL recommendations and try to reverse the increase in GDM.
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Target weight gains
New Institute of Medicine 2009 guidelines for weight gain in pregnancy
Overweight women BMI 25 to 29.96.8 to 11.3kg
Obese women BMI >304.9 to 9kg
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Options
* Exercise X
* Psychological X
* Diet ????
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Aim
Does a 4-step multidisciplinary approach to the management of obese pregnant women reduce weight gain and gestational diabetes in obese pregnant women?
Quinlivan JA et al, ANZJOG 2011
.
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Triangle of intervention
HIGH
LOW
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The 4 steps
1. Continuity of care;
2. Measure Weight gain at each visit;
3. Repeated short interventions by a food technologist;
4. An initial assessment by a clinical psychologist
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Hypotheses
The 4-step approach would reduce the incidence of gestational diabetes;
The reduction in gestational diabetes would be mediated through a reduction in maternal weight gain in pregnancy; and
This would occur without an impact upon birth weight.
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Controls
Routine antenatal care.
This consisted of midwifery, obstetrician and general practitioner antenatal clinics, with access to high-risk antenatal clinics if indicated on medical grounds.
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Intervention
Women in the intervention group attended a study-specific antenatal clinic which differed in routine care only in the following four steps.
All other clinic protocols across control and intervention clinics were identical and followed The Three Centre Consensus Statement on Maternity Care
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Variables Intervention Control P-value
GDM (%) 6 29 0.04
Weight gain (kg)
7.0 (0.65) 13.8 (0.67) <0.001
Birthweight 3.5 (0.07) 3.4 (0.10) 0.162
Outcome data
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Variables Intervention Control P-value
GDM (%) 6 29 0.04
Weight gain (kg)
7.0 (0.65) 13.8 (0.67) <0.001
Birthweight 3.5 (0.07) 3.4 (0.10) 0.162
Outcome data
IOL : Obese women 4.9 to 9kg
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Variables (N) First visit(N=63)
Final visit(N=63)
Fizzy drinks 61 23
Water 2 47
Fast food 40 21
Home cooked meal 23 42
Fresh fruit 5 42
Fresh vegetable 11 42
Diet changes
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Quinlivan et al, 2011 Australia
EFFECTIVE
1. Continuity of care
2. Weigh at every antenatal visit
3. Short visit with nutritionist (5 minutes) to review:
• What did the patient eat the day before?
• Immediate written feedback on diet
4. Psychological assessment and intervention if required.
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What do other RCT in the literature show?
Is there a pattern?
Can we develop an even simpler intervention that works?
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All RCT
There are currently FOUR RCT of dietary interventions in obese pregnant women.
1. Wolff et al. (2008) Denmark
2. Thornton et al. (2009) USA
3. Guelinckx et al. (2010) Belgium
4. Quinlivan et al, 2011 Australia
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Wolff et al. (2008) Denmark
1. Weight at every antenatal visit and discussion of weight gain by the provider
2. One hour visit with a dietician followed by 9 x 30 minute visits. Total of 10 visits.
REPEATED INTERVENTION EFFECTIVE
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Thornton et al. (2009) USA
1. Continuity of care
2. Initial visit by dietician.
3. Food diary maintained by patient and discussed at every antenatal visit by providers.
REPEATED INTERVENTION EFFECTIVE
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Guelinckx et al. (2010) Belgium
1. Continuity of care
2. Single visit by a dietician.
SINGLE INTERVENTION
NOT EFFECTIVE
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Quinlivan et al, 2011 Australia
REPEATED
INTERVENTION
EFFECTIVE
![Page 34: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
Meta analysis – Impact upon maternal weight gain
Overall (I-squared = 89.3%, p = 0.000)
ID
Guelinckx et al. (2010)
Quinlivan et al. (2011)
Study
Wolff et al. (2008)
Thornton et al. (2009)
-6.46 (-7.55, -5.37)
WMD (95% CI)
-0.80 (-3.30, 1.70)
-6.80 (-8.63, -4.97)
-6.70 (-10.27, -3.13)
-9.10 (-10.93, -7.27)
267
(SD); Treatment
65, 9.8 (7.6)
63, 7 (5.2)
N, mean
23, 6.6 (5.5)
116, 5 (6.8)
270
(SD); Control
65, 10.6 (6.9)
61, 13.8 (5.2)
N, mean
28, 13.3 (7.5)
116, 14.1 (7.4)
100.00
Weight
19.20
35.68
%
9.36
35.75
-6.46 (-7.55, -5.37)
WMD (95% CI)
-0.80 (-3.30, 1.70)
-6.80 (-8.63, -4.97)
-6.70 (-10.27, -3.13)
-9.10 (-10.93, -7.27)
267
(SD); Treatment
65, 9.8 (7.6)
63, 7 (5.2)
N, mean
23, 6.6 (5.5)
116, 5 (6.8)
Treatment reduces weight gain Treatment increases weight gain
0-10.9 0 10.9
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Meta analysis – Impact upon maternal weight gain
Overall (I-squared = 89.3%, p = 0.000)
ID
Guelinckx et al. (2010)
Quinlivan et al. (2011)
Study
Wolff et al. (2008)
Thornton et al. (2009)
-6.46 (-7.55, -5.37)
WMD (95% CI)
-0.80 (-3.30, 1.70)
-6.80 (-8.63, -4.97)
-6.70 (-10.27, -3.13)
-9.10 (-10.93, -7.27)
267
(SD); Treatment
65, 9.8 (7.6)
63, 7 (5.2)
N, mean
23, 6.6 (5.5)
116, 5 (6.8)
270
(SD); Control
65, 10.6 (6.9)
61, 13.8 (5.2)
N, mean
28, 13.3 (7.5)
116, 14.1 (7.4)
100.00
Weight
19.20
35.68
%
9.36
35.75
-6.46 (-7.55, -5.37)
WMD (95% CI)
-0.80 (-3.30, 1.70)
-6.80 (-8.63, -4.97)
-6.70 (-10.27, -3.13)
-9.10 (-10.93, -7.27)
267
(SD); Treatment
65, 9.8 (7.6)
63, 7 (5.2)
N, mean
23, 6.6 (5.5)
116, 5 (6.8)
Treatment reduces weight gain Treatment increases weight gain
0-10.9 0 10.9
![Page 36: Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022032600/56649db95503460f94aa962c/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
The future intervention
1. The intervention needs to be repeated.
2. The intervention can be short.
3. The intervention should include a written element retained by the woman.
4. The intervention can be undertaken by anyone in the care team.
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A 3 step model
Step 1: Continuity of care;
Step 2: Weight at every antenatal visit;
Step 3: Repeated review by the ANC
provider of a DIETARY DIARY.
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Enrole:Women presenting <20 weeks with a BMI>25
Intervention3 step model versus existing model of care
10 Outcomes: * Reduce gestational weight gain* Reduce gestational diabetes (15% to 10%)
Sample size:N=1450
The Diary RCT
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The DIARY trial
Key elements of the diary...1. The 3 Do.2. The 3 Don’t.3. Diary pages where the patient writes in the previous day’s food and drink intake.4. Space for care provider to provide written feedbackat each ANC.
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Do and Don’t
3 Do...•Drink water•Eat fresh vegetables•Eat home cooked meals
3 Don’t...•Smoke•Drink alcohol•Drink fizzy drinks, cordial and juices
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Thankyou