Literature DB >> 20804345

Effect of high parity on the occurrence of prediabetes: a cohort study.

Yahya M Al-Farsi1, Daniel R Brooks, Martha M Werler, Howard J Cabral, Mohammed A Al-Shafei, Henk C Wallenburg.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of parity on the occurrence of prediabetes defined as an abnormal fasting plasma glucose (5.6-6.9 mmol/l), an abnormal 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test (7.7-11.1 mmol/l), or both, before 12 weeks gestation or at least 6 weeks after delivery.
DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study.
SETTING: Nested on a community trial Delaying the Development of Diabetes Mellitus type 2 (AMAL study) in Oman. POPULATION: 532 women with a total of 3,196 pregnancies.
METHODS: We conducted sets of Cox proportional hazard regression analyses: crude, age-adjusted and full models which adjusted for maternal age, education, family income and year of delivery. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Hazard ratio (HR) of the effect of parity on prediabetes.
RESULTS: We enumerated 258 cases of prediabetes over 8,529 person-years of follow up. In the crude model, high parity (> or =5) pregnancies carried a higher risk of prediabetes than low parity (<5) pregnancies (HR = 3.72; 95% CI = 2.80, 4.91), and the prediabetes incidence rate increased in a dose-response fashion over multiple categories of parity. In age-only models, the association attenuated with control of the confounding effect of maternal age (HR = 1.05; 95% CI = 0.76, 1.45). Adjusting for other confounders in the full models yielded similar results to those adjusted for maternal age only.
CONCLUSIONS: The apparent effect of parity on the occurrence of prediabetes is attributable to the confounding effect of maternal age rather than to high parity.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20804345     DOI: 10.3109/00016349.2010.501854

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand        ISSN: 0001-6349            Impact factor:   3.636


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