4.7 Article

Maternal AA/EPA Ratio and Triglycerides as Potential Biomarkers of Patients at Major Risk for Pharmacological Therapy in Gestational Diabetes

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14122502

Keywords

AA; EPA ratio; inflammation; gestational diabetes; nutraceuticals; oxidative-stress; platelet-activating factor

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health-Current research IRCCS
  2. Enervit SpA
  3. Italian Ministry of University and Research (MIUR)

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This study aimed to assess the impact of nutraceutical supplements on patients with gestational diabetes mellitus (GD) and to explore anthropometric, metabolic, and inflammatory parameters as biomarkers for identifying individuals requiring pharmacological treatment. The results showed no significant differences in metabolic, inflammatory, and antioxidant parameters between the group receiving nutraceutical supplements and the placebo group. However, triglyceride concentration and AA/EPA ratio appear to be biomarkers for higher inflammatory levels and patients with GD who require pharmacological treatment.
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GD) is characterized by glycemic and lipid metabolism alterations in an environment of low-grade inflammation. Our trial aimed to assess the effect of nutraceutical supplements (omega-3 fatty acids, anthocyanins, and alpha-cyclodextrins) in GD patients and evaluate the role of anthropometric, metabolic, and inflammatory parameters as biomarkers to identify subjects who require pharmacological hypoglycemic treatment during gestation. Pregnant women with GD at 24-28 weeks of gestation were enrolled in a double-blind trial and randomized to receive either nutraceutical supplements or a placebo for 12 weeks. No statistically significant differences were observed between the two groups in blood and urine measurements of metabolic, inflammatory, and antioxidant parameters. In the whole cohort, pre-pregnancy BMI and anthropometric measurements were significantly different in patients who required pharmacological intervention. These patients showed higher triglycerides, CRP, and insulin levels and gave birth to newborns with significantly higher weights. Subjects with a greater AA/EPA ratio had higher PAF levels and gave birth four days earlier. In conclusion, one-to-one nutritional coaching and poor compliance with nutraceutical supplementation might have outweighed the impact of this intervention. However, triglyceride concentration and the AA/EPA ratio seems to be a biomarker for higher inflammatory levels and GD candidates for pharmacological treatment. An adequate assumption of omega-3 in women with GD, either by a controlled diet or by nutraceutical supplementation, reduces the need for pharmacological therapy.

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