| Literature DB >> 30567604 |
Maude Perreault1, Stephanie A Atkinson2, Michelle F Mottola3, Stuart M Phillips4, Keyna Bracken5, Eileen K Hutton6, Feng Xie7, David Meyre7,8, Rita E Morassut7, Harry Prapavessis3, Lehana Thabane7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence from epidemiological and animal studies support the concept of programming fetal, neonatal, and adult health in response to in utero exposures such as maternal obesity and lifestyle variables. Excess gestational weight gain (GWG), maternal physical activity, and sub-optimal and excess nutrition during pregnancy may program the offspring's risk of obesity. Maternal intake of dairy foods rich in high-quality proteins, calcium, and vitamin D may influence later bone health status. Current clinical practice guidelines for managing GWG are not founded on randomized trials and lack specific "active intervention ingredients." The Be Healthy in Pregnancy (BHIP) study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) designed to test the effectiveness of a novel structured and monitored Nutrition + Exercise intervention in pregnant women of all pre-pregnancy weight categories (except extreme obesity), delivered through prenatal care in community settings (rather than in hospital settings), on the likelihood of women achieving recommended GWG and a benefit to bone status of offspring and mother at birth and six months postpartum.Entities:
Keywords: Bone; Dairy foods; Developmental origins of health and disease; Exercise; Gestational weight gain; Infancy; Nutrition; Pregnancy; Proteins; Randomized controlled trial
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30567604 PMCID: PMC6299965 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-3065-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Flow diagram
Fig. 2BHIP study protocol timeline
BHIP study arms
| Component | Control arm | Intervention arm |
|---|---|---|
| Gestational weight gain (GWG) | Latest recommendation by Health Canada in terms of GWG [ | Latest recommendation by Health Canada in terms of GWG [ |
| Nutrition during pregnancy | Latest recommendation by Health Canada in terms of nutrition during pregnancy [ | Latest recommendation by Health Canada in terms of nutrition during pregnancy [ |
| 1. Individualized nutrition plan with a high protein content: ~ 25% of energy intake which is within the acceptable macronutrient distribution range | ||
| Exercise during pregnancy | Latest recommendation by Health Canada in terms of exercise during pregnancy [ | Latest recommendation by Health Canada in terms of exercise during pregnancy [ |
| 1. Controlled walking program with the study nutritionist | ||
| Wellbeing during pregnancy |
| |
| 1. Focus group and information session given by a midwife in the third trimester of pregnancy |
Analysis plan: objectives, outcomes, hypotheses, and methods of analysis
| Objective | Hypothesis | Outcome measure (type of outcome: B = binary or C = continuous) | Methods of analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Primary | An experimental combined Nutrition + Exercise intervention will increase the percentage of pregnant women who achieve GWG within current recommendations when compared with standard care provided in the primary care community setting | Proportion of women who are within the BMI appropriate GWG according to the IOM guideline for GWGs (B) | Logistic regression |
| 2. Secondary | An experimental combined Nutrition + Exercise intervention will lead to better maternal and child bone health outcomes when compared to standard care | | Regression analysis |
| 3. Subgroup analyses | The percentage of women within each of the normal, overweight, and obese BMI categories will be similar with respect to being with the IOM target GWG for each category | Proportion of women in each BMI category who reach appropriate GWG according to the IOM guideline for GWGs | Regression analysis including the interaction term of BMI group X Intervention group |
| 4. Sensitivity analyses | Combined Nutrition + Exercise Intervention leads to a greater percentage of women who achieve GWG within current recommendations when compared to standard care | Primary outcome only | |
IMPORTANT REMARKS:
In all analyses, results will be expressed as difference or OR (95% CI) and associated p values, as appropriate
Bonferroni method will be used to adjust the overall level of significance for multiple secondary outcomes
We will examine residuals to assess model assumptions
The GEE [76] is a technique that allows to specify the correlation structure between patients within a site and this approach produces unbiased estimates under the assumption that missing observations will be missing at random. An amended approach of weighted GEE will be employed if missingness is found not to be at random [77]
*Infant growth outcomes at 6 months will be adjusted for feeding type (duration of breast feeding from birth to 6 months)