Obstetrics and Gynecology, Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital, and Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Obstetrics and Gynecology, Sainte-Justine Hospital Research Center, University of Montreal, Montreal, Québec, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2019 Apr 15;9(4):e025084. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025084.
Both pregestational and gestational diabetes mellitus (PGDM, GDM) occur more frequently in First Nations (North American Indians) pregnant women than their non-Indigenous counterparts in Canada. We assessed whether the impacts of PGDM and GDM on perinatal and postneonatal mortality may differ in First Nations versus non-Indigenous populations.
A population-based linked birth cohort study.
17 090 First Nations and 217 760 non-Indigenous singleton births in 1996-2010, Quebec, Canada.
Relative risks (RR) of perinatal and postneonatal death. Perinatal deaths included stillbirths and neonatal (0-27 days of postnatal life) deaths; postneonatal deaths included infant deaths during 28-364 days of life.
PGDM and GDM occurred much more frequently in First Nations (3.9% and 10.7%, respectively) versus non-Indigenous (1.1% and 4.8%, respectively) pregnant women. PGDM was associated with an increased risk of perinatal death to a much greater extent in First Nations (RR=5.08[95% CI 2.99 to 8.62], p<0.001; absolute risk (AR)=21.6 [8.6-34.6] per 1000) than in non-Indigenous populations (RR=1.76[1.17, 2.66], p=0.003; AR=4.2[0.2, 8.1] per 1000). PGDM was associated with an increased risk of postneonatal death in non-Indigenous (RR=3.46[1.71, 6.99], p<0.001; AR=2.4[0.1, 4.8] per 1000) but not First Nations (RR=1.16[0.28, 4.77], p=0.35) infants. Adjusting for maternal and pregnancy characteristics, the associations were similar. GDM was not associated with perinatal or postneonatal death in both groups.
The study is the first to reveal that PGDM may increase the risk of perinatal death to a much greater extent in First Nations versus non-Indigenous populations, but may substantially increase the risk of postneonatal death in non-Indigenous infants only. The underlying causes are unclear and deserve further studies. We speculate that population differences in the quality of glycaemic control in diabetic pregnancies and/or genetic vulnerability to hyperglycaemia's fetal toxicity may be contributing factors.
在加拿大,与非原住民相比,妊娠前糖尿病(PGDM)和妊娠糖尿病(GDM)在第一民族(北美印第安人)孕妇中更为常见。我们评估了 PGDM 和 GDM 对围产期和新生儿后期死亡的影响是否在第一民族和非原住民人群中存在差异。
基于人群的关联出生队列研究。
1996 年至 2010 年魁北克省 17090 名第一民族和 217760 名非原住民单胎分娩。
围产期和新生儿后期死亡的相对风险(RR)。围产期死亡包括死产和新生儿(出生后 0-27 天)死亡;新生儿后期死亡包括出生后 28-364 天的婴儿死亡。
PGDM 和 GDM 在第一民族(分别为 3.9%和 10.7%)中比非原住民(分别为 1.1%和 4.8%)孕妇更为常见。PGDM 与围产期死亡风险增加的相关性在第一民族中要大得多(RR=5.08[95%CI 2.99 至 8.62],p<0.001;绝对风险(AR)=21.6[8.6-34.6]每 1000 人)而非原住民人群(RR=1.76[1.17,2.66],p=0.003;AR=4.2[0.2,8.1]每 1000 人)。PGDM 与非原住民(RR=3.46[1.71,6.99],p<0.001;AR=2.4[0.1,4.8]每 1000 人)新生儿后期死亡风险增加相关,但与第一民族(RR=1.16[0.28,4.77],p=0.35)婴儿无关。调整了产妇和妊娠特征后,相关性相似。GDM 与两组的围产期或新生儿后期死亡均无关。
这项研究首次表明,PGDM 可能使第一民族的围产期死亡风险增加幅度远远大于非原住民,但可能使非原住民婴儿的新生儿后期死亡风险显著增加。其潜在原因尚不清楚,值得进一步研究。我们推测,妊娠糖尿病患者血糖控制质量和/或对高血糖胎儿毒性的遗传易感性方面的人群差异可能是促成因素。