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Sex-specific mediating effect of gestational weight gain between pre-pregnancy body mass index and gestational diabetes mellitus. | LitMetric

Sex-specific mediating effect of gestational weight gain between pre-pregnancy body mass index and gestational diabetes mellitus.

Nutr Diabetes

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Environment, Nutrition and Public Health, Tianjin Medical University, Tianjin, China.

Published: April 2022

Background: Inappropriate weight gain may increase the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). However, the relationship between pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), weight gain, and GDM has not been precisely quantified. This study aimed to explore whether gestational weight gain played a mediating role between pre-pregnancy BMI and GDM and whether the mediating effect was sex specific.

Methods: This study established a population-based observational cohort to assess weight gain in pregnant women. Mediation analyses were performed to quantify whether weight gain mediated the association between pre-pregnancy BMI and GDM.

Results: A total of 67,777 pregnant women were included in the final analysis, among whom 6751 (10.0%) were diagnosed with GDM. We verified that both pre-pregnancy BMI and weight gain were associated with GDM, and that BMI negatively contributed to weight gain. We also found that weight gain had a significant mediating effect on the relationship between pre-pregnancy BMI and GDM (Z × Z confidence intervals [CIs] 0.00234-0.00618). Furthermore, the effect was sex-specific, in that it was only significant in overweight women carrying female fetuses (Z × Z CIs 0.00422-0.01977), but not male fetuses (Z × Z CIs -0.00085 to 0.01236).

Conclusions: Weight gain during pregnancy had a fetal sex-specific mediating effect between pre-pregnancy BMI and GDM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9039078PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41387-022-00203-5DOI Listing

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