| Literature DB >> 26566144 |
Maria Camprubi Robles1, Cristina Campoy2, Llenalia Garcia Fernandez3, Jose M Lopez-Pedrosa4, Ricardo Rueda4, Maria J Martin4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Diabetes during gestation is one of the most common pregnancy complications associated with adverse health effects for the mother and the child. Maternal diabetes has been proposed to negatively affect the cognitive abilities of the child, but experimental research assessing its impact is conflicting. The main aim of our study was to compare the cognitive function in children of diabetic and healthy pregnant women.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26566144 PMCID: PMC4643884 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0142583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study flowchart showing the number of studies identified, screened, assessed for eligibility and included in the qualitative and quantitative analysis [17].
*Further information regarding the excluded studies can be found in S2 Text.
Characteristics of the cohort studies included in the systematic review and meta-analysis (n = 12).
| Reference and type of study | Maternal age | Maternal BMI | Maternal diabetes diagnosis | Diabetes control | Sample size | Child age(years) | SES | Parental education | Other confounders | Cognitive test and primary cognitive outcome | Findings | Risk of bias | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fraser et al. 2012 Cohort prospective, ALSPAC (UK) | ND | GDM women were overweight | Questionnaire | ND | PGDM | 8 | Yes | Yes | Sex and maternal age at birth, pre-pregnancy BMI, maternal smoking, parity, mode of delivery, gestational age, birth weight standardized for gestational age and duration of breastfeeding |
|
| L | 8 |
| Nomura et al. 2012 Cohort retrospective (Queens College, Flushing, New York, USA) | ND | ND | Mother’s retrospective report | ND | GDM | 4 | No | No | Age of mother, mother’s alcohol use and smoking during pregnancy, age, sex, race/ethnicity, and birth weight of the child, and maternal ADHD symptoms, paternal ADHD symptoms, and risk-group status. |
|
| L | 7 |
| Hod et al. 1999 Cohort prospective (Israel) | ND | ND | Management and control of maternal diabetes at the Rabin Medical Center | Diet+ insulin | T1DM | 1 | No | No | No significant differences in maternal age, gestational age at delivery, incidence of premature delivery, birth weight, or neonatal complications |
|
| M | 5 |
| Yamashita et al. 1996 Cohort prospective (Kurume, Japan) | DM: 30.6 years; Ctrl: 29.6 years | ND | OGTT | Diet | T2DM | 3–4 | No | No | No significant differences in birth weight, in duration of pregnancy, maternal age and age at time of IQ testing, but there were in duration of pregnancy and maternal toxoanemia |
|
| H | 6 |
| DeBoer et al. 2005 Cohort prospective (Minnesota, USA) | ND | ND | OGTT | Diet with or without insulin | DM | Up to 1 | No | No | Gestational age |
|
| H | 7 |
| Nelson et al. 2003 Cohort prospective (Minnesota, USA). | ND | ND | OGTT | Diet with or without insulin | DM | 1 | No | Yes | No significant differences in gestational age, and maternal age, but there were in birth weight |
|
| L | 7 |
| Ornoy et al. 1998§ Cohort retrospective (Israel) | ND | ND | Laboratory examinations | Low sugar diet and insulin | PGDM | 5–12 (mean 8) | No | Yes | Children were matched by age and school placement, by gestational age and birth order |
|
| L | 7 |
| Sells et al. 1994 Cohort 3-year follow-up (University of Washington) in the collaborative DIEP (USA) | T1DM: 26.6 years Ctrl: 30.5 years | ND | Described in detail elsewhere35 | Better in “early entry” mothers. “Late entry” mothers had significantly higher mean glycosylated hemoglobin during the 1st and 2nd trimesters than “early entry” | For MDI: T1DM | 1, 2 and 3 | No | Yes | Not adjusted |
|
| L | 9 |
| Rizzo et al. 1991 Cohort prospective (Prentice Women's Hospital, Chicago, IL, USA) | ND | ND | OGTT | The “high risk” group received insulin |
| 3–5 | Yes | No | Race or ethnicity origin |
|
| L | 8 |
| Townsend et al. 2005 Cohort retrospective (Minnesota, USA) | ND | ND | ND | ND | DM | 4 | No | No | Gestational age |
|
| M | 5 |
| Nelson et al.2000 Cohort prospective (University of Minnesota, USA) | ND | ND | OGTT | Diet with or without insulin | DM | 1 | No | No | Not adjusted |
|
| H | 6 |
| De Regnier et al. 2000 Cohort prospective (New York, USA) | ND | ND | Medical history | Only | DM | 1 | No | Yes | No significant differences in gestational age, birth weight and birth head circumference |
|
| H | 4 |
Studies list is ordered by date and by type of outcome (Most recent studies and “support” are showed first).
ALSPAC, Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children; ND, Not defined; GDM, Gestational Diabetes Mellitus; PGDM, Pre-gestational Diabetes Mellitus; Ctrl, Control; BMI, Body Mass Index; WISC-III/R, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-3rd Edition, R, revised; IQ, Intelligence Quotient; ADHD, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder; WPPSI-III/R, Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence–3rd Edition, R, Revised; SES, Socio Economic Status; T1DM, Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus; T2DM, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus; BSID-I/II, Bayley Scales of Infant Development- 1st/2nd Edition; MDI, Mental Development Index; PDI, Psychomotor Development Index; OGTT, Oral Glucose Tolerance Test; DIEP, Diabetes in Early Pregnancy; FA, Fatty Acids.
Risk of bias classification (GRADE): L, Low; M, Medium; H, High.
Quality score (Newcastle-Ottawa): from 0 (lowest) to 9 (highest).
† Number of children included in the studies.
*All values refer to mean (Standard Deviation), otherwise it is stated.
§ Three references are related to the same subjects, so only the oldest study was included.
Fig 2Effect of pregnancy diabetes on the mental and psychomotor development and intelligence quotient.
Forest plots comparing the difference in the (A) Mental Development Index and (B) Psychomotor Development Index subscales of the BSID between children of diabetic and non-diabetic mothers. (C) Forest plots comparing the difference in the intelligence quotient yielded by combined data from the Wechsler scales and the Stanford-Binet intelligence scale between children of diabetic and non-diabetic mothers.