Title: Maternal Obesity the risks
1Maternal Obesity the risks
- Dr Mark McLean
- Endocrinologist
- Blacktown Westmead Hospitals
- (with thanks to Dr Jennifer Bradford and A/Prof
Leonie Callaway)
2Overview
- Extent of the problem?
- Maternal Fetal risks
- What can we do about it?
3Obesity in Australia
- In Australia 52 of women are overweight (BMI
25-30) or obese (BMI gt30) - 2.5 fold increase in 20 years
- Trend is rising fastest for young women(Ausdiab
Study, Med J Aust 2005 178427) - 41 women aged 18 to 23 gained weight between
1996 and 2000 - average 2.5 kg - If you had a baby - 5.4 kilograms. (Australian
Longitudinal Study on Womens Health
alswh.org.au) - AUSTRALIAN PREGNANT WOMEN ARE NOW HEAVIER THAN
EVER BEFORE
4The risks
- Mother
- Hypertension
- Diabetes
- Thrombo-embolism
- Haemorrhage
- Death
- Baby
- Malformations
- Macrosomia
- Birth injury
- Perinatal death
- Later diabetes obesity
5UK Confidential enquiry maternal deaths
- Depression and obesity are now the major
causes of deaths related to pregnancy in UK. - Obese women have roughly doubled risk of death.
(BMJ 20043291205)
6Maternal Complications - Diabetes
- Gestational Diabetes
- Obesity causes insulin resistance
- Increased inflammatory mediators
- Increasing risk with increasing maternal
pre-pregnancy BMI - Obese women OR 3.6 15.3
- Permanent Type 2 diabetes is now common in
pregnancy, carries higher risk than Type
1.(McElduff et at Diabetes Care 2005 281260)
7Diabetes in Pregnancy at Blacktown
- - Increasing T2DM
- Increasing insulin usage
- Increasing complications
8Maternal Complications - HT
- Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy
- Increasing maternal pre-pregnancy BMI is
associated with - Essential hypertension
- Gestational hypertension
- Pre eclampsia
- Independent of diabetes
- Systematic review
- Risk of pre eclampsia doubles for every 5-7 kg/m2
increase in pre pregnancy BMI (OBrien et al,
2003)
9Maternal Complications - thrombosis
- Highest risk assoc. with C-section
- DVT4-fold increased risk (2.3 vs 0.6)(Edwards
Obstet Gynecol, 1996, 87389) - Pulmonary embolism in pregnancy
- Normal weight 0.04
- Overweight 0.07
- Obese 0.08 (Sebire et al, 2001)
10Obstructive Sleep Apnoea
- Obese pregnant women are more likely to snore and
tend to have sleep apnoea and hypopnoeas
(Maasilta et al, 2001) - This may be related to adverse fetal outcomes
(Pien and Schwab, 2004)
11Intra-partum complications
- Increased risk of induction of labour
- Higher rate of failed induction in obese
- Higher rate of failed vaginal birth after
C-Section - Dramatically increased rates of C-Section
- Increased rates of operative delivery
- Increased rates of complicated normal vaginal
delivery - Shoulder dystocia
- Third/fourth degree lacerations
- Failure to progress
- Mechanisms?
- Infant size, increased fat in the soft tissues of
the pelvis, suboptimal uterine contractions
12Anaesthetic complications
- Epidural analgesia during labour is more likely
to fail as BMI increases (Dresner et al, 2006) - General anaesthesia complicated by
- Postpartum sleep apnoea
- Difficult intubation
- More frequent aspiration(Hood, Anesthesiology
1993 791210)
13Perioperative complications
- Increased post-partum haemorrhage
- Endometritis
- Wound breakdown and infection
- Longer hospital stay
- Chest infection (RR 1.34)
14Practical Difficulties
- Inaccurate assessment of growth, lie,
presentation - Blood pressure cuffs/automated blood pressure
devices - Vascular access
- Theatre beds/trolleys/staff
- Ultrasonography
- Monitoring during labour
15Fetal assessment
- Ultrasonography in obese women is often
suboptimal - Fetal anomolies more likely to be missed
(RR1.43) - Clinical assessment of fetal size
unreliable(Wolfe et al, 1990)
16Fetal malformations
- Increasing BMI associated with
- Neural tube defects
- CNS defects
- Cardiac 2x
- Ventral wall -3x
- Intestinal defects
- Multiple defects
- Mechanism?
- Insulin, triglycerides, uric acid, estrogens,
chronic hypoxia, hypercapnoea, fuel mediated
teratogenesis, adequacy of folic acid, failed
detection? -
- Big worry folate doesnt protect the infant of
obese women
17Birthweight
- Macrosomia increased with
- Maternal pre-pregnancy BMI
- Weight gain during pregnancy
- Gestational diabetes
- Babies are getting bigger
- Catalano Term singletons have increased by 116g
over 30 years - Maternal pre pregnancy BMI is the most important
predictor of fetal fat mass (Catalano et al,
2003) - LGA babies 4 times as many born to obese women,
as to women with diabetes
18Stillbirth
- OR antepartum and neonatal death in obese women
2.0 3.4 - Mechanism
- Obese pregnant women have
- Impaired microvascular endothelial function
- Higher triglyceride levels
- Lower HDL levels
- Hyperinsulinemia
- Higher inflammatory markers (Ramsay et al, 2002)
- Sleep apnea has been related to poor fetal
outcomes (Pien et al, 2004)
19Stillbirth in Obese Women
(Nohr et al, Am J Obstet Gynecol 2005 106,
250-259)
20In summary
- Anything that can go wrong in pregnancy is more
likely to do so in obese women. - This is not simply due to increased diabetes
- There are independent effects of- pre-pregnancy
weight- additional weight gain in pregnancy-
diabetes
21Long term fetal outcomes
- Obese babies are NINE TIMES more likely to grow
into obese adults (Baird et al, 2005) - Higher birthweights are associated with
adolescent obesity
22Long term maternal outcomes
- Gestational weight gain is related to post partum
weight retention - Pregnancy provides a window to look at the
womans metabolic future - Type 2 diabetes
- HDP cardiovascular disease, stroke, MI,
hypertension
23What to do?
- Measure weight
- Talk to her about her weight, she is likely to be
motivated - Do not allow access to low-risk models of care
- Treat this as an opportunity for long-term
behaviour modification - Aim for limited weight gain in pregnancy
24What is optimal weight gain?
Kiel et. al. 120,251 pregnancies, Missouri USA
(Obstet Gynecol, 2007, 110752) Cedergren. 300,00
0 pregnancies, Sweden (Obstet Gynecol 2007
110759)
25Life Balance Program pilot intervention
- Recruitment in 2007
- BMI gt35, gestation lt 26 weeks
- Individual dietitian appointments and follow-up
- Food diaries and personal feedback
- Physical activity program, offered twice weekly
- 59 women involved, 35 completed program
- Average booking BMI 44
- Significant modification of diet, some increases
in activity
Cost 16,000 for 1 year
26Comparison of 2 pregnancies booking BMI
Average 42
Average 38
This pregnancy
Last pregnancy
27Comparison of 2 pregnancies weight gain
Average 16kg
Average 8kg
Last pregnancy
This pregnancy
28Summary
- Maternal obesity is associated with significant
risk to mother and baby - It is a modifiable risk factor
- Pro-active approach is justified
- Likely to be cost-effective
- Most efficacious interventions not yet determined
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