PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Association of diabetes in pregnancy with child weight at birth, age 12 months and 5 years--a population-based electronic cohort study.

  • Kelly Morgan,
  • Mohammed Rahman,
  • Mark Atkinson,
  • Shang-Ming Zhou,
  • Rebecca Hill,
  • Ashrafunnesa Khanom,
  • Shantini Paranjothy,
  • Sinead Brophy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079803
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. e79803

Abstract

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BackgroundThis study examines the effect of diabetes in pregnancy on offspring weight at birth and ages 1 and 5 years.MethodsA population-based electronic cohort study using routinely collected linked healthcare data. Electronic medical records provided maternal diabetes status and offspring weight at birth and ages 1 and 5 years (n = 147,773 mother child pairs). Logistic regression models were used to obtain odds ratios to describe the association between maternal diabetes status and offspring size, adjusted for maternal pre-pregnancy weight, age and smoking status.FindingsWe identified 1,250 (0.9%) pregnancies with existing diabetes (27.8% with type 1 diabetes), 1,358 with gestational diabetes (0.9%) and 635 (0.4%) who developed diabetes post-pregnancy. Children whose mothers had existing diabetes were less likely to be large at 12 months (OR: 0.7 (95%CI: 0.6, 0.8)) than those without diabetes. Maternal diabetes was associated with high weight at age 5 years in children whose mothers had a high pre-pregnancy weight tertile (gestational diabetes, (OR:2.1 (95%CI:1.25-3.6)), existing diabetes (OR:1.3 (95%CI:1.0 to 1.6)).ConclusionThe prevention of childhood obesity should focus on mothers with diabetes with a high maternal pre-pregnancy weight. We found little evidence that diabetes in pregnancy leads to long term obesity 'programming'.