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Fetal male gender and the benefits of treatment of mild gestational diabetes mellitus

Authors :
Anthony Sciscione
Mark B. Landon
Steve N. Caritis
Jorge E. Tolosa
Ronald J. Wapner
Dwight J. Rouse
Ray O. Bahado-Singh
Michael W. Varner
Margaret Harper
Patrick M. Catalano
John M. Thorp
Marshall W. Carpenter
Lisa Mele
George R. Saade
Alan M. Peaceman
Susan M. Ramin
Brian M. Casey
Source :
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 206:422.e1-422.e5
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

Objective We evaluated whether improvements in pregnancy outcomes after treatment of mild gestational diabetes mellitus differed in magnitude on the basis of fetal gender. Study Design This is a secondary analysis of a masked randomized controlled trial of treatment for mild gestational diabetes mellitus. The results included preeclampsia or gestational hypertension, birthweight, neonatal fat mass, and composite adverse outcomes for both neonate (preterm birth, small for gestational age, or neonatal intensive care unit admission) and mother (labor induction, cesarean delivery, preeclampsia, or gestational hypertension). After stratification according to fetal gender, the interaction of gender with treatment status was estimated for these outcomes. Results Of the 469 pregnancies with male fetuses, 244 pregnancies were assigned randomly to treatment, and 225 pregnancies were assigned randomly to routine care. Of the 463 pregnancies with female fetuses, 233 pregnancies were assigned randomly to treatment, and 230 pregnancies were assigned randomly to routine care. The interaction of gender with treatment status was significant for fat mass ( P = .04) and birthweight percentile ( P = .02). Among women who were assigned to the treatment group, male offspring were significantly more likely to have both a lower birthweight percentile (50.7 ± 29.2 vs 62.5 ± 30.2 percentile; P P = .0005,) whereas these differences were not significant among female offspring. There was no interaction between fetal gender and treatment group with regard to other outcomes. Conclusion The magnitude of the reduction of a newborn's birthweight percentile and neonatal fat mass that were related to the treatment of mild gestational diabetes mellitus appears greater for male neonates.

Details

ISSN :
00029378
Volume :
206
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c02551f21a838a620a88199ce841f3ac