School of Nursing, University of Rochester, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY, 14642, USA.
Department of Surgery, University of California Davis, Sacramento, CA, 95817, USA.
Pediatr Res. 2023 Nov;94(5):1619-1630. doi: 10.1038/s41390-023-02698-9. Epub 2023 Jun 20.
While pregnancy post-bariatric surgery has become increasingly common, little is known about whether and how maternal bariatric surgery affects the next generation. This scoping review aimed to collate available evidence about the long-term health of offspring following maternal bariatric surgery. A literature search was conducted using three databases (PubMed, PsycINFO, EMBASE) to obtain relevant human and animal studies. A total of 26 studies were included: 17 were ancillary reports from five "primary" studies (three human, two animal studies) and the remaining nine were "independent" studies (eight human, one animal studies). The human studies adopted sibling-comparison, case-control, and single-group descriptive designs. Despite limited data and inconsistent results across studies, findings suggested that maternal bariatric surgery appeared to (1) modify epigenetics (especially genes involved in immune, glucose, and obesity regulation); (2) alter weight status (unclear direction of alteration); (3) impair cardiometabolic, immune, inflammatory, and appetite regulation markers (primarily based on animal studies); and (4) not affect the neurodevelopment in offspring. In conclusion, this review supports that maternal bariatric surgery has an effect on the health of offspring. However, the scarcity of studies and heterogenous findings highlight that more research is required to determine the scope and degree of such effects. IMPACT: There is evidence that bariatric surgery modifies epigenetics in offspring, especially genes involved in immune, glucose, and obesity regulation. Bariatric surgery appears to alter weight status in offspring, although the direction of alteration is unclear. There is preliminary evidence that bariatric surgery impairs offspring's cardiometabolic, immune, inflammatory, and appetite regulation markers. Therefore, extra care may be needed to ensure optimal growth in children born to mothers with previous bariatric surgery.
虽然妊娠后的减重手术已变得越来越普遍,但对于产妇减重手术是否以及如何影响下一代知之甚少。本范围综述旨在整理有关产妇减重手术后后代长期健康的现有证据。使用三个数据库(PubMed、PsycINFO、EMBASE)进行文献检索,以获取相关的人体和动物研究。共纳入 26 项研究:17 项是来自五项“主要”研究(三项人体研究,两项动物研究)的辅助报告,其余 9 项是“独立”研究(八项人体研究,一项动物研究)。人体研究采用了同胞比较、病例对照和单组描述性设计。尽管数据有限且研究结果不一致,但研究结果表明,产妇减重手术似乎(1)改变表观遗传学(特别是与免疫、葡萄糖和肥胖调节相关的基因);(2)改变体重状况(改变的方向尚不清楚);(3)损害心脏代谢、免疫、炎症和食欲调节标志物(主要基于动物研究);以及(4)不影响后代的神经发育。总之,本综述支持产妇减重手术对后代健康有影响。然而,研究的稀缺性和结果的异质性突出表明,需要更多的研究来确定这种影响的范围和程度。影响:有证据表明,减重手术会改变后代的表观遗传学,特别是与免疫、葡萄糖和肥胖调节相关的基因。减重手术似乎会改变后代的体重状况,尽管改变的方向尚不清楚。有初步证据表明,减重手术会损害后代的心脏代谢、免疫、炎症和食欲调节标志物。因此,对于出生于曾接受过减重手术的母亲的孩子,可能需要特别注意以确保其最佳生长。