Lifecourse Epidemiology of Adiposity and Diabetes (LEAD) Center, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA.
Diabetologia. 2021 Mar;64(3):481-490. doi: 10.1007/s00125-020-05341-y. Epub 2021 Jan 6.
To address the intergenerational transmission of obesity and diabetes, strategies promoting the health of women of reproductive age appear to be urgently needed. In this narrative review, we summarise what has been learned from many prenatal clinical trials, discuss the emerging evidence from preconception clinical trials and highlight persistent gaps and critical future directions. Most trials tested prenatal interventions that resulted in a limited gestational weight gain of ~1 kg and reduced gestational diabetes by 20-30%. These interventions also reduced macrosomia by 20-40% but had little-to-no impact on other offspring outcomes at birth or beyond. Far fewer trials tested preconception interventions, with almost all designed to improve conception or live-birth rates in overweight or obese women with infertility rather than reduce intergenerational risks in diverse populations. Preconception trials have successfully reduced weight by 3-9 kg and improved markers of glucose homeostasis and insulin resistance by the end of the intervention but whether effects were sustained to conception is unclear. Very few studies have reported offspring outcomes at birth and beyond, with no evidence thus far of beneficial effects on offspring obesity or diabetes risks. Further efforts to develop effective and scalable strategies to reduce risk of obesity and diabetes before conception should be prioritised, especially for diverse and under-resourced populations at disparately high risk of obesity and diabetes. Future clinical trials should include interventions with high potential for dissemination, diverse populations, thorough maternal phenotyping from enrolment through to conception and pregnancy, and rigorous assessment of offspring obesity and diabetes risks from birth onwards, including into the third generation.
为了解决肥胖和糖尿病的代际传递问题,似乎迫切需要制定促进育龄期妇女健康的策略。在这篇叙述性综述中,我们总结了从许多产前临床试验中获得的经验,讨论了来自孕前临床试验的新证据,并强调了持续存在的差距和关键的未来方向。大多数试验测试了产前干预措施,这些措施导致孕妇体重增加约 1 公斤,妊娠期糖尿病减少 20-30%。这些干预措施还使巨大儿的比例降低了 20-40%,但对出生时或出生后的其他后代结局几乎没有影响。测试孕前干预措施的试验要少得多,几乎所有这些试验都是为了提高超重或肥胖且有不孕问题的女性的受孕或活产率,而不是降低不同人群的代际风险。孕前试验成功地将体重减轻了 3-9 公斤,并改善了干预结束时的葡萄糖稳态和胰岛素抵抗标志物,但效果是否持续到受孕还不清楚。很少有研究报告出生时及以后的后代结局,迄今为止,没有证据表明对后代肥胖或糖尿病风险有有益影响。应优先努力制定有效的和可扩展的策略,在受孕前降低肥胖和糖尿病的风险,特别是对面临肥胖和糖尿病高风险的不同和资源不足的人群。未来的临床试验应包括具有高度传播潜力的干预措施、不同的人群、从招募到受孕和妊娠的全面的母体表型、以及从出生开始对后代肥胖和糖尿病风险进行严格评估,包括第三代。