| Literature DB >> 28451583 |
Birgit Arabin1,2, Ahmet A Baschat2,3.
Abstract
Physiologic adaptations during pregnancy unmask a woman's predisposition to diseases. Complications are increasingly predicted by first-trimester algorithms, amplify a pre-existing maternal phenotype and accelerate risks for chronic diseases in the offspring up to adulthood (Barker hypothesis). Recent evidence suggests that vice versa, pregnancy diseases also indicate maternal and even grandparent's risks for chronic diseases (reverse Barker hypothesis). Pub-Med and Embase were reviewed for Mesh terms "fetal programming" and "pregnancy complications combined with maternal disease" until January 2017. Studies linking pregnancy complications to future cardiovascular, metabolic, and thrombotic risks for mother and offspring were reviewed. Women with a history of miscarriage, fetal growth restriction, preeclampsia, preterm delivery, obesity, excessive gestational weight gain, gestational diabetes, subfertility, and thrombophilia more frequently demonstrate with echocardiographic abnormalities, higher fasting insulin, deviating lipids or clotting factors and show defective endothelial function. Thrombophilia hints to thrombotic risks in later life. Pregnancy abnormalities correlate with future cardiovascular and metabolic complications and earlier mortality. Conversely, women with a normal pregnancy have lower rates of subsequent diseases than the general female population creating the term: "Pregnancy as a window for future health." Although the placenta works as a gatekeeper, many pregnancy complications may lead to sickness and earlier death in later life when the child becomes an adult. The epigenetic mechanisms and the mismatch between pre- and postnatal life have created the term "fetal origin of adult disease." Up to now, the impact of cardiovascular, metabolic, or thrombotic risk profiles has been investigated separately for mother and child. In this manuscript, we strive to illustrate the consequences for both, fetus and mother within a cohesive perspective and thus try to demonstrate the complex interrelationship of genetics and epigenetics for long-term health of societies and future generations. Maternal-fetal medicine specialists should have a key role in the prevention of non-communicable diseases by implementing a framework for patient consultation and interdisciplinary networks. Health-care providers and policy makers should increasingly invest in a stratified primary prevention and follow-up to reduce the increasing number of manifest cardiovascular and metabolic diseases and to prevent waste of health-care resources.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular diseases; fetal programming; metabolic diseases; pregnancy as a window for future health; preventive healthcare
Year: 2017 PMID: 28451583 PMCID: PMC5389980 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Effect of developmental environment on later maternal phenotype and pregnancy complications. Risks for non-communicable diseases increase throughout a life course due to reduced plasticity. Increased risk factors, suspicious first-trimester screening, and pregnancy complications may be considered as the first “markers” and thus allow earlier intervention strategies compared to first symptoms of manifest chronic disease. Modified according to Sattar and Greer (4), Godfrey and Barker (11), and Godfrey et al. (12), similarly designed for Ref. (13).
Schematic similarities and differences of gestational diabetes and pregnancy hypertension, with gratitude, according to the work of Thilaganathan (.
| Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) | Pregnancy hypertension | |
|---|---|---|
| Predisposing factors | Same as for type 2 diabetes | Same as for cardiac disease |
| Onset of disorder | Mid to late pregnancy | Mid to late pregnancy |
| Effect of parity | More common in primiparity | More common in primiparity |
| Recurrence risk | Increased risk if previously affected pregnancy | Increased risk if previously affected pregnancy |
| Placental histology | Some histological lesions seen more often in GDM | Some histological lesions seen more often in pregnancy hypertension |
| Specificity of histology | None of the placental histological lesions specific for the disorder | None of the placental histological lesions specific for the disorder |
| Temporal nature of lesions | Seen more frequently in early-onset and/or severe disorder | Seen more frequently in early-onset and/or severe disorder |
| Placental function | Increased maternal-to-fetal transplacental glucose transfer | Impaired maternal perfusion of the uteroplacental bed |
| Fetus | Increased fetal glucose levels lead to macrosomia | Impaired placental function leads to impaired fetal growth |
| Mechanism of screening | GTT gauges pancreatic reserve | Uterine Doppler, PIGF and BP are all measures of cardiac function |
| Performance of screening | Better for early-onset GDM | Better for early-onset preeclampsia (PE) |
| Timing of screening test | Improved sensitivity the later in pregnancy it is performed | Improved sensitivity the later in pregnancy it is performed |
| Diagnostic test | Supra-normal glucose levels in both pregnant and non-pregnant | High BP in both pregnant population |
| Cure for disorder | Birth | Birth |
| Treatment/amelioration | Insulin—treats the biological deficit | Antihypertensive medications—treat a symptom of the disorder |
| Long-term maternal health | 50% develop type 2 diabetes by 10 years postpartum | 20% develop chronic hypertension by 10 years postpartum |
| Maternal adaption | Insulin requirements increase twofold to threefold in pregnancy | Cardiac output increases by about 50% in pregnancy |
| Early-onset phenotypes | Present with normal or lower insulin levels compared to non-pregnancy | Present with normal or lower cardiac outputs compared to non-pregnancy |
| Late-onset phenotypes | Present with supra-normal (high) insulin levels compared to non-pregnancy | Present with supra-normal (high) cardiac output compared to non-pregnancy |
| Etiology | Inability of maternal pancreas to deal with the glucose load of pregnancy | Impaired trophoblast invasion or maternal cardiac maladaptation? |
Impact of pregnancy complications on maternal risks for disease categories in later life (prospective, mostly retrospective cohorts, and systematic reviews).
| Pregnancy disease | Sample ( | Literature (Reference number/year) | Definition of health risk in later maternal life | Association of health risk HR/OR/RR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| >1 miscarriage | 129,200 | ( | Ischemic heart disease (IHD) | HR 1.52 (1.13–2.06) |
| 2 miscarriages | 129,200 | ( | IHD | HR 1.25 (1.04–1.49) |
| ≥3 miscarriages prior to first birth | 129,200 | ( | IHD | HR 1.56 (1.14–2.15) |
| Child with FGR (general) | 923,586 | ( | CAD, CVD, cerebrovascular disease | HR 1.39 (1.22–1.58) |
| Term FGR | 923,586 | ( | CAD, CVD, cerebrovascular disease | HR 1.38 (1.15–1.65) |
| Preterm FGR | 923,586 | ( | CAD, CVD, cerebrovascular disease | HR 3.4 (2.26–5.11) |
| Birthweight | 783,814 | ( | Maternal CVD mortality | 0.74/kg (0.56–0.99)—inverse relationship |
| Birthweight | 783,814 | ( | Maternal grandfather CVD mortality | 1.05 (1.01–1.09) |
| Birthweight (inverse relationship) | 783,814 | ( | Paternal Grandmother CVD mortality | 0.93/kg (0.85–1.00)—inverse relationship |
| Low birthweight <2,500 g | 119,668 | ( | Cerebrovascular disease | aHR 2.51 (1.71–3.70) |
| Multiparity | 2,533 | ( | CVD | RR 1.5 (1.1–1.9) |
| 1 birth | 1,332,062 | ( | CVD | 1.09 (95% CI 1.03–1.15) |
| >5 births | 1,332,062 | ( | CVD | 1.47 (95% CI 1.37–1.57) |
| >2 children | 4,286 | ( | Maternal CVD | OR 1.30 (1.17–1.44) |
| >2 children | 4,252 | ( | Paternal CVD | OR 1.12 (1.02–1.22) |
| Preeclampsia (general) | 1,985 | ( | Death at coronary revascularization | HR 1.61 (1.00–2.58) |
| Maternal placental disease | 1,130,764 | ( | Premature heart failure or dysrhythmia | HR 1.51 (1.26–1.80) |
| Maternal placental disease + FGR | 1,130,764 | ( | Premature heart failure or dysrhythmia | HR 2.42 (1.25–4.67) |
| Maternal placental syndrome | 1,030,000 | ( | CVD | HR 2.0 (1.7–2.2) |
| Maternal placental syndrome + FGR | 1,030,000 | ( | CVD | HR 3.1, 2.2–4.5 |
| Maternal placental syndrome + FD | 1,030,000 | ( | CVD | HR 4.4, 2.4–7.9 |
| Preterm birth 32–37 weeks | 923,686 | ( | CVD | HR 1.39 (1.22–1.58) |
| Preterm birth 28–31 weeks | 923,686 | ( | CVD | HR 2.57 (1.97–3.34) |
| Spontaneous preterm birth (SPB) | 750,350 | ( | Death from IHD | HR 2.26 (1.88–2.71) |
| SPB | 750,350 | ( | Total IDH | HR 1.58 (1.47–1.71) |
| Preterm birth 32–36 weeks | 782,287 | ( | Thromboembolism | aOR 1.42 (1.24–1.62) |
| (No) Breastfeeding | 23,701 | ( | Increased maternal weight after 7 years | β = 0.003 (0.01, 0.003) path analysis, inverse relationship |
| Breastfeeding (with formula) in patients with GDM | 1,010 | ( | Incidence of type 2 DM after 2 years | aHR 0.64 |
| Breastfeeding (mostly) in patients with GDM | 1,010 | ( | Incidence of type 2 DM after 2 years | aHR 0.54 |
| Breastfeeding (exclusive) in patients with GDM | 1,010 | ( | Incidence of type 2 DM after 2 years | aHR 0.46 |
| Pregnancy weight gain > IOM limits | 65,000 | ( | 3 years postpartum weight gain | 3.06 (1.50–4.63) kg, |
| Pregnancy weight gain > IOL limits | 65,000 | ( | 15 years postpartum weight gain | Mean increase of 4.72 (2.94–6.50) kg |
| Gestational diabetes | 675,455 | ( | Manifest type 2 DM | RR 7.43 (4.79–11.51) |
| Maternal obesity | 46,688 | ( | Hospitalization for CV events | HR 2.6 (2.0–3.4) |
| Pre-pregnancy BMI > 30 kg/m2 | ||||
| Premature ovarian insufficiency | 190,588 | ( | IHD | HR 1.69 (1.29–2.21) |
| Premature ovarian insufficiency | 190,588 | ( | Total CVD | HR 1.61 (1.22–2.12) |
a, adjusted; BMI, body mass index; CAD, coronary artery disease; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DM, diabetes mellitus; FGR, fetal growth restriction; FD, fetal death; HR, hazard ratio; OR, odds ratio; RR, risk ratio (or relative risk).
Impact of pregnancy complications on fetal risks for disease categories up to adulthood (selected prospective, mostly retrospective cohorts, and systematic reviews).
| Pregnancy disease | Sample ( | Literature (Reference number/year) | Definition of health risk in fetal life as an adult | Association of health risk HR/OR/relative risk (RR)/SD (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LBW and famine during gestation | 975 | ( | Coronary artery disease | HR 1.9 (1.0 to 3.8) adjusted for sex |
| LBW and first-trimester famine | 726 | ( | CHD | OR 3.0 (1.1 to 8.1) age and sex adjusted |
| LBW and famine | 658 | ( | Systolic BP | −4.14 mmHg/kg (−7.24 to −1.03) inverse relation |
| Diastolic BP blood pressure | −2.09 mmHg/kg (−3.77 to −0.41) inverse relation | |||
| Prevalence of hypertension | OR 0.67/kg (−0.49 to 0.93) age and sex adjusted | |||
| LBW (SGA) up to HBW (LGA) | 6,239 | ( | Left ventricular mass | SD score 0.05 (0.03 to 0.08) |
| LBW (SGA) up to HBW (LGA) | 6,239 | ( | Aortic root diameter | SD score 0.08 (0.05 to 0.1) |
| Preeclampsia (PE) | 45,249 | ( | High systolic BP during child and adulthood | 2.39 mmHg (1.74 to 3.05) |
| High diastolic BP during child and adulthood | 1.35 mmHg (0.90 to 1.80) | |||
| PE | 2,868 | ( | Cardiovascular risk, hypertension and metabolic disease (QRISK > 75 P) at age 20 | OR 2.5 (1.32 to 4.56) |
| Prospective cohort | ||||
| Complicated HTN + birth factors | 2,868 | ( | Hypertension at age 20 | aOR 6.25 (1.96 to 19.96) |
| Complicated HTN + risks at 20 years | aOR 6.74 (1.25 to 36.29) | |||
| Complicated HTN + social risks | aOR 6.63 (1.17 to 37.57) | |||
| Preterm SGA vs. term | 1,756 | ( | Adult hypertension | 36.9 vs. 25.4%; risk factors adjusted |
| First-trimester famine | 66,321 | ( | Schizophrenia ICD-6/-9 | OR 2.01 (1.03 to 3.94) |
| First-trimester famine | 737 | ( | Accelerated aging, depression | β = −85 (−139 to −32), |
| First- and second-trimester famine | 100,543 | ( | Antisocial personality disorder in men ICD-6 | aOR 2.5 (1.5 to 4.2) |
| Fetal growth restriction | 1,679 | ( | Hostility | (beta)SD < −0.05 (−0.14 to 0.00) |
| First-trimester famine | 2,414 | ( | Increase LDL–high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratios adult | Increase 13.9% (2.6 to 26.4) |
| LBW | 2,546 | ( | Leptin to fat mass ratio, leptin, diabetes mellitus (DM), obesity | |
| Complicated HTN + birth factors | 2,868 | ( | Overweight or obesity at age 20 | aOR 1.68 (1.18 to 2.39) |
| Complicated HTN + risks at 20 years | Prospective cohort | aOR 1.62 (1.05 to 2.52) | ||
| Complicated HTN + social risks | aOR 1.59 (1.02 to 2.48) | |||
| Early preterm | 1,358 | ( | High insulin at birth | OR 2.05 (1.69 to 2.42) |
| Early preterm | 1,358 | ( | High insulin in childhood | OR 1.31 (1.10 to 1.52) |
| Parental smoking | 17,003 | ( | Increased body mass index (BMI) and WC at 32 years | Increase of 0.57 kg/m2/1.46 cm ( |
| Birth weight < 2 SD | 61,311 | ( | DM as an adult | OR 2.01 (1.39 to 2.91) |
| Birth weight ≥ 2 SD | DM as an adult | OR 2.27 (1.38 to 3.74) | ||
| Famine second trimester | 702 | ( | Decreased glucose tolerance at 50/58 years | Diff = 0.4 mmol/l (0.1 to 0.7), sex/BMI adjusted |
| LGA and GDM during pregnancy | 179 | ( | Metabolic syndrome at 11 years (increased insulin resistance and obesity) | OR 10.4 (1.5 to 74.4) |
| After ovulation induction | 2,577 | ( | Increased fasting glucose levels at 6 years | 0.4 mmol/l (0.2 to 0.6) |
| After | 2,577 | ( | Increased fasting glucose levels at 6 years | 0.2 mmol/l (0.0 to 0.5) |
a, adjusted; BP, blood pressure; CHD, coronary heart disease; GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; HR, hazard ratio; HTN, hypertensive disease in pregnancy; LBW, low birthweight; LGA, large for gestational age; OR, odds ratio; SGA, small for gestational age.
Figure 2Schematic proposal for health-care concepts to intensify interdisciplinary cooperation, pre-conceptional counseling, and postpartum consultation of women with pregnancy complications, according to Carson (. BMI, body mass index; BP, blood pressure; EBM, evidence-based medicine; GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; MF, maternal fetal; NCD, non-communicable disease.
Perinatal death rates as relative risks (RRs) and later maternal death rates form cardiovascular disease in later life correlated with gestational age at birth and pregnancy disease [preeclampsia (PE) and fetal growth restriction], designed from recent data of the Norwegian data base, personal communication and with gratitude to Rolv Skjaerven, 2017.
| PE during first pregnancy | Gestational weeks at delivery | Birth weight ( | Perinatal death (RR) | Maternal death (HR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | ≥37 | Large (>0) | 2.0 | 1.8 |
| Yes | ≥37 | Small (<0) | 6.3 | 1.5 |
| Yes | 35–36 | Large | 4.1 | |
| Yes | 35–36 | Small | 23.8 | 0.9 |
| Yes | ≤34 | Large | 29.3 | |
| Yes | ≤34 | Small | 2.3 | |
| No | ≥37 | Large | 1 (reference) | 2 (reference) |
| No | ≥37 | Small | 2.9 | 1.3 |
| No | 35–36 | Large | 4.3 | 2 |
| No | 35–36 | Small | 21.3 | 2.5 |
| No | ≤34 | Large | 51 | 2 |
| No | ≤34 | Small | 2.8 |
Figure 3Representative pictures of male offspring of rats at postnatal day 650. C, control diet; CEx, control diet + maternal exercise intervention; MO, maternal obesity; and MOEx, maternal obesity + maternal exercise intervention, with gratitude, according to Nathanielsz et al. (146).