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A Prospective Observational Trial of Factors Involved in the Intergenerational Transmission of the Non-communicable Disorders - Female Obesity Cohort and Intervention Study Group.
This prospective observational trial includes women with high risk pregnancies complicated with hyperglycemia in pregnancy and excessive body weight. The participants are enrolled when pregnant and monitored throughout pregnancy and delivery until the offspring is 6 months old. This research addresses the question which risk factors for non-communicable disorders such as hypertension, obesity, type 2 diabetes for a woman and her offspring can be detected during pregnancy and in early childhood.
The available epidemiological data clearly indicate a significant increase in the percentage of people with obesity and the metabolic syndrome in the population of women of reproductive age. These diseases predispose to the onset of type 2 diabetes at a young age and accelerate the risk of cardiovascular diseases, while in pregnant population they constitute a serious risk factor for gestational diabetes. Recent decades have brought a growing amount of evidence from prospective studies indicating the adverse impact of gestational diabetes on the health prognosis of the mother and her child. In the short-term perspective, hyperglycemia in pregnancy constitutes a risk factor for numerous maternal-fetal complications, in particular hypertensive diseases in pregnancy, excessive fetal growth, intrapartum complications induced by excessive birth weight of the newborn, which can result in intrapartum neonatal asphyxia or maternal postpartum haemorrhage. Gestational diabetes is also associated with an increased risk of fetal intrauterine death in late pregnancy, during delivery or postpartum. However, there is growing evidence of the adverse effects of gestational diabetes on long-term health outcomes of the mother and her offspring, even when glucose tolerance disorders are resolved after delivery. Hyperglycemia detected in pregnancy is a strong risk factor for the development of type 2 diabetes within several years after experiencing a complicated pregnancy. Moreover, maternal hyperglycemia has been shown to adversely affect the long-term risk of obesity, metabolic syndrome, pre-diabetes, and type 2 diabetes in the offspring of this pregnant population. This relationship is so clear that it is the exposure of the fetus to the abnormal intrauterine metabolic environment that is considered to be one of the leading causes of the significantly increased prevalence of the aforementioned civilization diseases among children and adolescents. The authors of the study expect that the obtained results will provide important data enabling early identification of the population that can benefit most measurably from the diagnosis and possible treatment of conditions predisposing to the non-communicable diseases. The authors believe, that this study will identify specific maternal characteristics that could be targets for individualized interventions modifying risk factors of civilization diseases in mothers and their offspring. The authors expect that the measurable effect of the research will be achievable in the short term - in the form of reduction of maternal-fetal complications characteristic of pregnancy complicated with obesity and / or gestational diabetes (maternal "diabesity"), and in the long term - in the form of improvement of the incidence rates of non-communicable disorders in the population of pregnant women of a risk profile similar to this presented by the cohort included in the study. Research objectives: * identification of epigenetic risk factors of intergenerational glucose tolerance disorders and examining the possibility of their modification so as to break the intergenerational "vicious circle" of metabolic syndrome and lifestyle diseases resulting from it; * identification of mechanisms responsible for the intergenerational transmission of classic and "new" risk factors of non-communicable diseases; * gather information for future trials on development and evaluation of interventions aimed at reducing the effects of the intergenerational "vicious circle" of obesity, insulin resistance and diseases related to lifestyle. The protocol includes the following visits: V0 - recruitment, V1 - gestational age 28-32 weeks, V2 - gestational age 36-38 weeks, V3 - delivery, V4 - six weeks postpartum, V5 - six months postpartum At the V0, the researchers will collect detailed information concerning demographics, anthropometrics, past diseases, pregnancy-related conditions, lifestyle and dietary habits At the V1, V2, V4 and V5, the researchers collect data regarding maternal glucose levels and body weight, perform noninvasive tests of cardiovascular function and collect biological material to be aliquoted, frozen and stored for further examination of biomarkers of oxidative stress, fat tissue function, inflammation, insulin resistance, clotting system, cardiometabolic risk; also information regarding fetal growth (V1,V2) and child's anthropometrics and development (V4, V5) will be collected. At the V3, the researchers collect a detailed information regarding delivery and neonatal anthropometrics, and collect samples of placenta and cord blood to be aliquoted, frozen and stored for further examination (see above). At the V6, the researchers collect information regarding maternal dietary and lifestyle habits, perform noninvasive tests of cardiovascular function and collect biological material to be aliquoted, frozen and stored for further examination of biomarkers of oxidative stress, fat tissue function, inflammation, insulin resistance, clotting system, cardiometabolic risk.
Age
18 - 45 years
Sex
FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers
No
Department of Reproduction, Poznan University of Medical Sciences
Poznan, Poland
Start Date
December 3, 2017
Primary Completion Date
November 1, 2023
Completion Date
August 1, 2024
Last Updated
June 14, 2021
200
ESTIMATED participants
Monitoring and lifestyle
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
Poznan University of Medical Sciences
NCT07144800
NCT05909046
Data Source & Attribution
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