Chu Susan Y, Callaghan William M, Kim Shin Y, Schmid Christopher H, Lau Joseph, England Lucinda J, Dietz Patricia M
Division of Reproductive Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Mailstop K-23, 1600 Clifton Rd., Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
Diabetes Care. 2007 Aug;30(8):2070-6. doi: 10.2337/dc06-2559a. Epub 2007 Apr 6.
Numerous studies in the U.S. and elsewhere have reported an increased risk of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) among women who are overweight or obese compared with lean or normal-weight women. Despite the number and overall consistency of studies reporting a higher risk of GDM with increasing weight or BMI, the magnitude of the association remains uncertain. This meta-analysis was conducted to better estimate this risk and to explore differences across studies.
We identified studies from three sources: 1) a PubMed search of relevant articles published between January 1980 and January 2006, 2) reference lists of publications selected from the PubMed search, and 3) reference lists of review articles on obesity and maternal outcomes published between January 2000 and January 2006. We used a Bayesian model to perform the meta-analysis and meta-regression. We included cohort-designed studies that reported obesity measures reflecting pregnancy body mass, that had a normal-weight comparison group, and that presented data allowing a quantitative measurement of risk.
Twenty studies were included in the meta-analysis. The unadjusted ORs of developing GDM were 2.14 (95% CI 1.82-2.53), 3.56 (3.05-4.21), and 8.56 (5.07-16.04) among overweight, obese, and severely obese compared with normal-weight pregnant women, respectively. The meta-regression analysis found no evidence that these estimates were affected by selected study characteristics (publication date, study location, parity, type of data collection [retrospective vs. prospective], and prevalence of GDM among normal-weight women).
Our findings indicate that high maternal weight is associated with a substantially higher risk of GDM.
美国及其他地区的众多研究报告称,与体重正常或偏瘦的女性相比,超重或肥胖女性患妊娠期糖尿病(GDM)的风险更高。尽管有大量研究且总体结果一致,表明随着体重或体重指数(BMI)增加,患GDM的风险更高,但这种关联的程度仍不确定。进行这项荟萃分析是为了更好地估计这种风险,并探讨不同研究之间的差异。
我们从三个来源确定研究:1)对1980年1月至2006年1月发表的相关文章进行PubMed检索;2)从PubMed检索中选择的出版物的参考文献列表;3)2000年1月至2006年1月发表的关于肥胖与孕产妇结局的综述文章的参考文献列表。我们使用贝叶斯模型进行荟萃分析和荟萃回归。我们纳入了队列设计研究,这些研究报告了反映孕期体重的肥胖指标,有体重正常的对照组,且提供了可进行风险定量测量的数据。
荟萃分析纳入了20项研究。与体重正常的孕妇相比,超重孕妇、肥胖孕妇和严重肥胖孕妇患GDM的未调整比值比(OR)分别为2.14(95%可信区间[CI] 1.82 - 2.53)、3.56(3.05 - 4.21)和8.56(5.07 - 16.04)。荟萃回归分析未发现证据表明这些估计值受所选研究特征(发表日期、研究地点、产次、数据收集类型[回顾性与前瞻性]以及体重正常女性中GDM的患病率)的影响。
我们的研究结果表明,孕妇体重过高与患GDM的风险显著升高相关。