1. A reduction in sedentary behaviour in obese women during pregnancy reduces neonatal adiposity: the DALI randomised controlled trial
- Author
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Maria Grazia Dalfrà, Peter Damm, Sander Galjaard, Mette Tanvig, Judith G. M. Jelsma, Annunziata Lapolla, David Hill, Alexandra Kautzky-Willer, Gernot Desoye, Ewa Wender-Ozegowska, Mireille N M van Poppel, Agnieszka Zawiejska, Lise Lotte Torvin Andersen, Juan M. Adelantado, Dorte Møller Jensen, Fidelma Dunne, David Simmons, Elisabeth R. Mathiesen, Rosa Corcoy, Frank J. Snoek, Goele Jans, Alessandra Bertolotto, Jürgen Harreiter, F. André Van Assche, Roland Devlieger, Public and occupational health, Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D), APH - Mental Health, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, Medical psychology, APH - Quality of Care, and Obstetrics & Gynecology
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0301 basic medicine ,Lifestyle intervention ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diabetes risk ,Offspring ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Obesity ,Exercise ,Life Style ,Adiposity ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Neonatal adiposity ,Randomised controlled trial ,business.industry ,Mediation ,medicine.disease ,Gestational diabetes ,Diabetes, Gestational ,030104 developmental biology ,Animals, Newborn ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Sedentary Behavior ,medicine.symptom ,Metabolic syndrome ,business ,Weight gain - Abstract
Altres ajuts: Funding The project described has received funding from the European Community's 7th Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no. 242187. In the Netherlands, additional funding was provided by the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMw) (grant no. 200310013). In Poland, additional funding was obtained from the Polish Ministry of Science (grant no. 2203/7, PR/2011/2). In Denmark, additional funding was provided by Odense University Free Research Fund. In the UK, the DALI team acknowledges the support received from the National Institute for Health Research Clinical Research Network Eastern, especially the local diabetes clinical and research teams based in Cambridge. In Spain, additional funding was provided by CAIBER (Consorcio de Apoyo a la Investigación Biomédica en Red; 1527-B-226). The funders had no role in any aspect of the study beyond funding. Aims/hypothesis: Offspring of obese women are at increased risk of features of the metabolic syndrome, including obesity and diabetes. Lifestyle intervention in pregnancy might reduce adverse effects of maternal obesity on neonatal adiposity. Methods: In the Vitamin D And Lifestyle Intervention for Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) Prevention (DALI) lifestyle trial, 436 women with a BMI ≥29 kg/m were randomly assigned to counselling on healthy eating (HE), physical activity (PA) or HE&PA, or to usual care (UC). In secondary analyses of the lifestyle trial, intervention effects on neonatal outcomes (head, abdominal, arm and leg circumferences and skinfold thicknesses, estimated fat mass, fat percentage, fat-free mass and cord blood leptin) were assessed using multilevel regression analyses. Mediation of intervention effects by lifestyle and gestational weight gain was assessed. Results: Outcomes were available from 334 neonates. A reduction in sum of skinfolds (−1.8 mm; 95% CI −3.5, −0.2; p = 0.03), fat mass (−63 g; 95% CI −124, −2; p = 0.04), fat percentage (−1.2%; 95% CI −2.4%, −0.04%; p = 0.04) and leptin (−3.80 μg/l; 95% CI −7.15, −0.45; p = 0.03) was found in the HE&PA group, and reduced leptin in female neonates in the PA group (−5.79 μg/l; 95% CI −11.43, −0.14; p = 0.05) compared with UC. Reduced sedentary time, but not gestational weight gain, mediated intervention effects on leptin in both the HE&PA and PA groups. Conclusions/interpretation: The HE&PA intervention resulted in reduced adiposity in neonates. Reduced sedentary time seemed to drive the intervention effect on cord blood leptin. Implications for future adiposity and diabetes risk of the offspring need to be elucidated. Trial registration: ISRCTN70595832.
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- 2019