Preventive Medicine Reports (Feb 2024)

The impact of a lifestyle intervention on postpartum weight retention among US Hispanic women with overweight and obesity

  • Kathryn A. Wagner,
  • Brian W. Whitcomb,
  • Bess Marcus,
  • Penelope Pekow,
  • Milagros C. Rosal,
  • Lynnette Leidy Sievert,
  • Katherine L. Tucker,
  • JoAnn E. Manson,
  • Lisa Chasan-Taber

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38
p. 102633

Abstract

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Introduction: To evaluate the effect of a culturally-modified, motivationally-targeted, individually-tailored lifestyle intervention on postpartum weight retention among Hispanic women with overweight/obesity. Materials and methods: Proyecto Mamá was a randomized controlled trial conducted in western Massachusetts (2014–2020). Hispanic women with overweight/obese pre-pregnancy BMI (n = 148) were randomized in early pregnancy to a Lifestyle Intervention (LI) or a Health & Wellness (HW) comparison arm. The LI was based upon theoretical concepts, used a low-cost, high-reach strategy, and focused on healthy exercise and diet with follow-up through 12-months postpartum. The primary outcome of change in weight was calculated as the difference between pre-pregnancy weight and 6-week, 6-month, and 12-month postpartum weight. The secondary outcome was achievement of 5 % weight reduction from pre-pregnancy weight. Retention was 68.2 % in the overall postpartum period and 31.0 % at 12-months. Results: In intent-to-treat analyses, compared to the HW arm, there was no difference in postpartum weight retention at 6-weeks (0.0 kg, 95 % CI: −3.4, 3.5), 6-months (-1.8 kg, 95 % CI: −5.6, 2.0), or 12-months (-2.0 kg, 95 % CI: −7.0, 3.1). In a secondary complete case analysis, compared to the HW arm, the LI arm had 5.5 times higher odds of meeting the postpartum weight reduction goal (aOR = 5.5, 95 % CI: 1.7, 17.9) adjusting for pre-pregnancy weight. Conclusions: A lifestyle intervention among at-risk Hispanic women with overweight/obesity had no overall impact on postpartum weight, but a beneficial impact among those who completed the trial. Future studies should focus on increasing the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention in this at-risk population.

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