4.7 Article

Are the metabolic changes of pregnancy reversible in the first year postpartum?

Journal

DIABETOLOGIA
Volume 58, Issue 7, Pages 1561-1568

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00125-015-3604-x

Keywords

Basal metabolic rate; Insulin response; Insulin sensitivity; Maternal metabolism; Preconception; Pregnancy

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [HD-22965-19]
  2. Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative of Cleveland from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) component of the National Institutes of Health [UL1TR000439]
  3. NIH roadmap for Medical Research

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Aims/hypothesis Maternal metabolic alterations are essential to achieve healthy pregnancy outcomes, but increasing maternal parity may be associated with long-term metabolic dysfunction risk. As existing data are limited by study design, our aim was to employ robust metabolic measures to determine whether or not physiological pregnancy alterations in maternal metabolic function persist at 1 year postpartum. Methods We evaluated 21 healthy women, of whom 11 had an interval pregnancy (IP) and assessment at preconception, during pregnancy and 1 year postpartum, and 10 had no IP and assessment at baseline and a 1 year interval. Assessment measures included body composition, insulin sensitivity and response, and basal metabolic rate. For each measure, IP vs no IP and time intervals within each group were compared using nonparametric analyses, reporting median (IQR). Results IP and no IP women were similar at enrolment, and no IP women had similar metabolic profiles at enrolment and the 1 year interval. IP women exhibited expected metabolic changes during pregnancy compared with preconception. In IP women, preconception and postpartum measures, including fat mass (20.7 [13.7-37.4] kg vs 18.4 [13.8-41.3] kg; p = 0.2), total insulin response (AUC 11,459 [9,230-13,696] pmol/ml x min vs 11,522 [5,882-17,404] pmol/ml x min; p = 0.9), insulin sensitivity (0.12 [0.06-0.13] mg [kg fat-free mass (FFM)](-1) min(-1) vs 0.11 [0.10-0.15] mg [kg FFM](-1) min(-1); p = 0.1) and basal metabolic rate (0.092 [0.092-0.105] kJ min(-1) FFM vs 0.096 [0.088-0.096] kJ min(-1) FFM; p = 0.5), were similar. Conclusions/interpretation Our findings suggest pregnancy might not irreversibly alter maternal metabolic profile, measured at preconception through to 1 year postpartum. This result might be explained by a return to pre-pregnancy weight.

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