Section of Neonatal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Imperial College London, Chelsea and Westminster Campus, 369 Fulham Road, London, SW10 9NH, UK.
Diabetologia. 2011 Aug;54(8):1957-66. doi: 10.1007/s00125-011-2180-y. Epub 2011 May 31.
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Offspring of mothers with diabetes are at increased risk of metabolic disorders in later life. Increased offspring BMI is a plausible mediator. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies examining offspring BMI z score in childhood in relation to maternal diabetes.
Papers reporting BMI z scores for offspring of diabetic (all types, and pre- and during-pregnancy onset) and non-diabetic mothers were included. Citations were identified in PubMed; bibliographies of relevant articles were hand-searched and authors contacted for additional data where necessary. We compared offspring BMI z score with and without adjustment for maternal pre-pregnancy BMI. We performed fixed effect meta-analysis except where significant heterogeneity called for use of a random effects analysis.
Data were available from nine studies. In the diabetic group unadjusted mean offspring BMI z score was 0.28 higher (all diabetic mothers vs controls (95% CI 0.09, 0.47; p = 0.004; nine studies; offspring of diabetic mothers n = 927, controls n = 26,384) and with adjustment for maternal pre-pregnancy BMI, 0.07 higher (95% CI -0.15, 0.28; p = 0.54; three studies; offspring of diabetic mothers n = 244, controls n = 11,206). There was no evidence of a difference in offspring BMI z score in relation to type of diabetes (gestational vs type 1, p = 0.95).
CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Maternal diabetes is associated with increased offspring BMI z score, although this is no longer apparent after adjustment for maternal pre-pregnancy BMI in the limited number of studies in which this is reported. Causal mediators of the effect of maternal diabetes on offspring outcomes remain to be established; we recommend that future research includes adjustment for maternal pre-pregnancy BMI.
目的/假设:患有糖尿病的母亲所生的子女在以后的生活中患代谢紊乱的风险增加。后代 BMI 的增加是一个合理的中介因素。我们对检查母亲糖尿病与后代儿童时期 BMI z 分数之间关系的研究进行了系统回顾和荟萃分析。
纳入了报告糖尿病(所有类型,以及妊娠前和妊娠期间发病)和非糖尿病母亲所生子女 BMI z 分数的论文。在 PubMed 中确定了参考文献;手工搜索了相关文章的参考文献,并在必要时联系作者以获取其他数据。我们比较了调整和未调整母亲妊娠前 BMI 的后代 BMI z 分数。除了存在显著异质性需要使用随机效应分析的情况外,我们进行了固定效应荟萃分析。
来自 9 项研究的数据可用。在糖尿病组中,未调整的后代平均 BMI z 分数高 0.28(所有糖尿病母亲与对照组(95%CI 0.09, 0.47;p=0.004;9 项研究;糖尿病母亲的后代 n=927,对照组 n=26384),调整母亲妊娠前 BMI 后高 0.07(95%CI -0.15, 0.28;p=0.54;3 项研究;糖尿病母亲的后代 n=244,对照组 n=11206)。与糖尿病类型(妊娠糖尿病与 1 型糖尿病,p=0.95)相比,后代 BMI z 分数没有差异。
结论/解释:母亲患有糖尿病与后代 BMI z 分数增加有关,但在报告了这种情况的为数不多的研究中,在调整了母亲妊娠前 BMI 后,这种情况就不再明显。母亲糖尿病对后代结局影响的因果中介因素仍有待确定;我们建议未来的研究包括调整母亲妊娠前的 BMI。