4.4 Article

Gestational Weight Gain in Pregnancies Following Bariatric Surgery

Journal

OBESITY SURGERY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11695-023-06496-4

Keywords

Bariatric surgery; Obesity; Gestational weight gain; Pregnancy

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This study compared the gestational weight gain (GWG) between women with previous bariatric surgery and those without, and investigated the correlation between GWG and birthweight (BW) or delivery of small-for-gestational-age (SGA) neonates. The results showed that post-bariatric women had similar GWG but delivered smaller babies compared to women without surgery. Additionally, GWG was not a significant predictor of BW or delivery of SGA neonates in women with previous bariatric surgery.
Introduction To compare the gestational weight gain (GWG) between women with previous bariatric surgery and those without and investigate whether GWG correlates with birthweight (BW) or delivery of a small-for-gestational-age (SGA) neonate.Materials and Methods Prospective, longitudinal study, include 100 pregnant women with previous bariatric surgery and 100 without weight loss surgery, but with similar early-pregnancy body mass index (BMI). In a sub-study, 50 of the post-bariatric women were also matched to 50 women without surgery, but early-pregnancy BMI similar to the pre-surgery BMI of the post-bariatric ones. All women had their weight/BMI measured at 11-14 and 35-37 weeks of gestation, and the difference in maternal weight/BMI between the two time points was expressed as GWG/BMI gain. Associations between maternal GWG/BMI gain and birthweight (BW) were examined.Results Compared to no bariatric women with similar early-pregnancy BMI, post-bariatric women had similar GWG (p = 0.46), and the number of women with appropriate, insufficient, and excessive weight gain was comparable between groups (p = 0.76). However, post-bariatric women delivered smaller babies (p < 0.001), and GWG was not a significant predictor of BW or of delivering a SGA neonate. Compared to no bariatric women with similar pre-surgery BMI, post-bariatric ones had higher GWG (p < 0.01) but still delivered smaller neonates (p = 0.001).Conclusions Post-bariatric women seem to have similar or greater GWG compared to women without surgery matched for early-pregnancy or pre-surgery BMI, respectively. Maternal GWG was not associated with BW or higher prevalence of SGA neonates seen in women with previous bariatric surgery.

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