4.5 Article

Associations of maternal diabetes mellitus and adiponectin gene polymorphisms with congenital heart disease in offspring A case-control study

Journal

MEDICINE
Volume 100, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000024672

Keywords

adiponectin gene; case-control study; congenital heart disease; diabetes mellitus; gene-environment interaction

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation Program of China [82073653, 81803313]
  2. Hunan Provincial Key Research and Development Program [2018SK2063, 2018SK2062]
  3. Hunan Provincial Science and Technology Talent Support Project [2020TJ-N07]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Hunan Province [2018JJ2551]
  5. NHC Key Laboratory of Birth Defect for Research and Prevention [KF2020006]

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This study found significant associations between maternal diabetes mellitus, adiponectin gene polymorphisms, and their interactions with risk of congenital heart disease in offspring. Further studies in different ethnic populations with larger samples and prospective designs are needed to confirm these findings.
This study aimed at assessing the association of maternal diabetes mellitus (DM), the adiponectin gene (APM1) gene polymorphisms, and their interactions with risk of congenital heart disease (CHD) in offspring. A case-control study of 464 mothers of CHD patients and 504 mothers of healthy children was conducted. After adjusting for potential confounding factors, our study suggested that mothers with gestational DM (GDM) during this pregnancy (adjusted odds ratio [aOR = 2.96]), GDM in previous pregnancy experiences (aOR = 3.16), and pregestational DM in the 3 months before this pregnancy (aOR = 4.52) were at a significantly higher risk of CHD in offspring, when compared with those without any diabetes. The polymorphisms of maternal APM1 gene at rs1501299 (T/T vs G/G: aOR = 3.45; T/G vs G/G: aOR = 1.73) and rs2241766 (G/G vs T/T, aOR = 3.36; G/T vs T/T, aOR = 1.93) were significantly associated with risk of CHD in offspring. In addition, significant interactions between maternal DM and the APM1 genetic variants on the development of CHD were found. Our findings indicate that maternal DM, APM1 gene genetic variants, and their interactions are significantly associated with risk of CHD in offspring. However, more studies in different ethnic populations and with a larger sample and prospective design are required to confirm our findings.

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