| Literature DB >> 29973985 |
Jürgen Harreiter1, Karin Schindler2, Dagmar Bancher-Todesca3, Christian Göbl3, Felix Langer4, Gerhard Prager4, Alois Gessl2, Michael Leutner2, Bernhard Ludvik2,5, Anton Luger2, Alexandra Kautzky-Willer1, Michael Krebs2.
Abstract
The prevalence of obesity is growing worldwide, and strategies to overcome this epidemic need to be developed urgently. Bariatric surgery is a very effective treatment option to reduce excess weight and often performed in women of reproductive age. Weight loss influences fertility positively and can resolve hormonal imbalance. So far, guidelines suggest conceiving after losing maximum weight and thus recommend conception at least 12-24 months after surgery. As limited data of these suggestions exist, further evidence is urgently needed as well for weight gain in pregnancy. Oral glucose tolerance tests for the diagnosis of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) should not be performed after bariatric procedures due to potential hypoglycaemic adverse events and high variability of glucose levels after glucose load. This challenges the utility of the usual diagnostic criteria for GDM in accurate prediction of complications. Furthermore, recommendations on essential nutrient supplementation in pregnancy and lactation in women after bariatric surgery are scarce. In addition, nutritional deficiencies or daily intake recommendations in pregnant women after bariatric surgery are not well investigated. This review summarizes current evidence, proposes clinical recommendations in pregnant women after bariatric surgery, and highlights areas of lack of evidence and the resulting urgent need for more clinical investigations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29973985 PMCID: PMC6008727 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4587064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Parameters and aspects recommended to control in women planning a pregnancy and during pregnancies after bariatric surgery.
| History of preexisting comorbidities such as diabetes mellitus, retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, or hypertension |
| Regular follow-up visits after bariatric surgery are recommended when planning a pregnancy: |
| (i) Nutritional counselling and monitoring of food intake, and exclusion of acute nutritional deficiencies |
| (ii) Half-yearly internal medicine and nutritional controls until two years postsurgical, thereafter 12-month intervals |
| (iii) Gynaecological/obstetric provision is strongly recommended |
| (iv) In case of nutritional deficiencies, controls have to be intensified, especially when pregnancy is planned |
| (v) Surgical controls if necessary or any complications occur (as well as recommended three months after surgery) |
| Pregnancy control interval: |
| (i) Obstetric examination at regular intervals at least every 4–6 weeks with control of weight, urine, and blood pressure, and narrower control intervals if complications occur, decided on individual basis |
| (ii) Regular fetal growth control (check for SGA and LGA) every 4–6 weeks starting from 24th week of pregnancy. Further Doppler ultrasound examinations might be necessary |
| (iii) Internal medicine and nutritional controls every trimester |
| (iv) Explore nutrient uptake, and check full blood count, clinical chemistry, coagulation, vitamins A, D, E, K, B12, iron status, folic acid, parathyroid hormone and protein, albumin, A1c, glucose, and TSH at least every trimester |
| (v) Additional laboratory controls if possible: thiamine and zinc |
| (vi) If necessary, closer intervals have to be considered on an individual basis (2–4 weeks in case of deficiencies, which need to be corrected). |
| Immediate contact with an experienced surgeon in case of unexpected symptoms (especially gastrointestinal) |
| Immediate consultation in case of emergencies: |
| (i) Acute persistent abdominal pain → consult: gynaecologist/obstetrician and surgeon |
| (ii) Persistent vomiting (consider thiamine deficiency; see below sections) → consult gynaecologist/obstetrician, internal specialist, and surgeon |
| A close interdisciplinary cooperation is highly necessary to provide optimal pregnancy outcomes |
| Specialized centres with experience in the care of pregnant women after bariatric surgery need to be contacted or should fully take care of pregnancies after bariatric surgery |
| Drugs not allowed in pregnancy should be discontinued before pregnancy if possible or switched to drugs allowed in pregnancy (e.g., ACE inhibitors, statins, several glucose-lowering drugs). If this is not possible, risk assessment has to be performed in agreement with the patient |
Suggestions for diagnosis of gestational diabetes and overt diabetes in early pregnancy (<20 weeks of gestation) following metabolic surgery using capillary blood glucose monitoring (adapted from [40, 41]).
| Fasting | ≥95 mg/dl |
| 1 h postprandially | In patients after gastric bypass/bariatric surgery of unknown significance (see text) |
| 2 h postprandially | ≥120 mg/dl |
| Overt diabetes diagnosis | |
| Fasting | ≥126 mg/dl |
| HbA1c | ≥6.5% |
| Random | In patients after gastric bypass/bariatric surgery of unknown significance (see text) |
HbA1c values are applicable after bariatric surgery. Hypoglycaemia can also occur more than two hours after meal intake.
Weight gain in pregnancy according to preconceptional BMI, adapted by IOM Guidelines 2009 [44].
| BMI | BMI limit (kg/m2) (WHO) | Recommended weight gain in pregnancy (kg) | Recommended weight gain per week (2nd and 3rd trimesters) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Underweight | <18.5 | 13–18 | 0.5 |
| Normal weight | 18.5–24.9 | 11–16 | 0.5 |
| Overweight | 25.0–29.9 | 7–11 | 0.3 |
| Obesity | ≥30.0 | 5–9 | 0.2 |
D-A-CH recommendations for supplementation of nutrients in pregnancies [68], tolerable upper intake levels according to EFSA [26] in pregnancy, and further nutritional recommendations in pregnancies after bariatric surgery according to Schultes et al. [25], Kaska et al. [75], Gonzalez et al. [28], Quyang et al. [7], Kushner et al. [62], ACOG [19], and Busetto et al. [5].
| Nutrient | Recommended daily dietary intake during pregnancy (D-A-CH) [ | UL (per day) | Pregnancy after bariatric surgery (per day) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iron | 30 mg | 45 mg | 100–200 mg [ |
| Calcium | 1000 mg6 | 2500 mg | 1500 mg [ |
| Vitamin D | 20 | 100 | 400 IU [ |
| Vitamin A | 1100 | 3000 | No more than 5000 IU1 [ |
| Vitamin E | 13 mg equivalent2,3 | 300 mg, 1000 mg | — |
| Vitamin K | 60 | — | 120 |
| Vitamin B12 | 3.5 | — | 1000 |
| Folic acid | 550 | 1 mg | 600–800 |
| Iodine | 230 | 600 | 250 |
| Zinc | 10 mg | 25 mg, 40 mg | 11 mg [ |
| Magnesium | 310 mg | 250 mg5, 350 mg5 | 200–1000 mg [ |
UL = upper limit; IU = international unit. In general, most of vitamins and trace elements mentioned are contained in typically available supplements used in pregnancy (e.g., Femibion, Pregnavit). 11 mg retinol equivalent = 6 mg all-trans-β-carotene = 12 mg other provitamin A carotenoids = 1 mg retinol = 1.15 mg all-trans-retinyl acetate = 1.83 mg all-trans-retinyl palmitate; 1 IU = 0.3 µg retinol. 21 mg RRR-α-tocopherol equivalent = 1 mg RRR-α-tocopherol = 1.49 IU; 1 IE = 0.67 mg RRR-α-tocopherol = 1 mg all-rac-α-tocopheryl acetate. 31 mg RRR-α-tocopherol (D-α-tocopherol) equivalent = 1.1 mg RRR-α-tocopheryl acetate (D-α-tocopheryl acetate) = 2 mg RRR-β-tocopherol (D-β-tocopherol) = 4 mg RRR-γ-tocopherol (D-γ-tocopherol) = 100 mg RRR-δ-tocopherol (D-δ-tocopherol) = 3.3 mg RRR-α-tocotrienol (D-α-tocotrienol) = 1.49 mg all-rac-α-tocopheryl acetate (D, L-α-tocopheryl acetate). 41 µg vitamin D = 40 IU. 5This UL does not include nutritional intake of magnesium from food or fluids and accounts for supplements only. 61200 mg calcium in women <19 years of age. 75 mg in patients with T2DM or BMI > 30 kg/m2 until 12 weeks of gestation. 82–3 times daily. All NIH recommendations for women >18 years of age; i.m., intramuscular; p.o., per os.
D-A-CH recommendations of nutritional intake during lactation [68] and tolerable upper intake level (UL) according to EFSA Guidelines [102] or the NIH [103] for healthy nonbariatric women as well as recommendations for intake after bariatric surgery for women (when available, data specific for lactation are reported).
| Nutrient | Recommended daily dietary intake during lactation (D-A-CH reference) | UL per day | Recommended daily intake after bariatric surgery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iron | 20 mg | 45 mg | 45–60 mg [ |
| Calcium | 1000 mg6 | 2500 mg | 1200–1500 mg [ |
| Vitamin D | 20 | 100 | At least 3000 IU [ |
| Vitamin A | 1500 | 3000 | 5000–10000 IU9 [ |
| Vitamin E | 17 mg equivalent2,3,7 | 300 mg, 1000 mg [ | Lactation 19 mg, else 15 mg [ |
| Vitamin K | 60 | No recommendation | 90–120 |
| Vitamin B12 | 4.0 | No recommendation | 1000 mg/month i.m. or s.c. [ |
| Folic acid | 450 | 1 mg | 400 |
| Iodine | 260 | 600 | — |
| Zinc | 11 mg | 25 mg, 40 mg | BPS 16–22 mg RYGB 8–22, mg, SG, LABG 8–11 mg [ |
| Magnesium | 390 mg | 250 mg5, 350 mg5 | — |
11 mg retinol equivalent = 6 mg all-trans-β-carotene = 12 mg other provitamin A carotenoids = 1 mg retinol = 1.15 mg all-trans-retinyl acetate = 1.83 mg all-trans-retinyl palmitate; 1 IU = 0.3 µg retinol. 21 mg RRR-α-tocopherol equivalent = 1 mg RRR-α-tocopherol = 1.49 IU; 1 IU = 0.67 mg RRR-α-tocopherol = 1 mg all-rac-α-tocopheryl acetate. 31 mg RRR-α-tocopherol (D-α-tocopherol) equivalent = 1.1 mg RRR-α-tocopheryl acetate (D-α-tocopheryl acetate) = 2 mg RRR-β-tocopherol (D-β-tocopherol) = 4 mg RRR-γ-tocopherol (D-γ-tocopherol) = 100 mg RRR-δ-tocopherol (D-δ-tocopherol) = 3.3 mg RRR-α-tocotrienol (D-α-tocotrienol) = 1.49 mg all-rac-α-tocopheryl acetate (D, L-α-tocopheryl acetate). 41 µg vitamin D = 40 IU. 5The UL does not include magnesium from nutritional sources or fluid and accounts for supplements only. 61200 mg calcium in women <19 years of age. 7Around 260 µg RRR-α-tocopherol equivalent extra per 100 g secreted milk. 8Around 0.13 µg vitamin B12 extra per 100 g secreted milk. 9Depending on procedure, LABG 5000 IU, RYGB or SG 5000–10000 IU, BPS 10000 IU per day, β-carotene form does not contribute to vitamin A toxicity. 10To women of childbearing age. All NIH recommendations for women >18 years of age; i.m., intramuscular; p.o., per os; BPS = biliopancreatic diversion; RYGB = Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; SG = sleeve gastrectomy; LAGB = laparoscopic gastric banding; DS = duodenal switch surgery.