| Literature DB >> 31492000 |
Kate Maslin1, Alison James2, Anne Brown3, Annick Bogaerts4,5, Jill Shawe2,3.
Abstract
Optimising the diet and weight of women prior to and during pregnancy is of paramount importance to both maternal and offspring health. In women who become pregnant after bariatric surgery, evidence suggests a better overall obstetric outcome in comparison to women with severe obesity managed conservatively. Historically, most studies in this population group have monitored supplement adherence or serum concentrations of micronutrients, rather than dietary intake. The aim of this study was to synthesise current knowledge of the dietary intake of women during pregnancy following bariatric surgery. A systematic search of search engines was conducted using the following databases: MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Cochrane database, Scopus, Trip, NHS Evidence, UK Clinical Trials, ClinicalTrials.gov, Prospero, Epistemonikos and Open Grey. Titles and abstracts were screened independently by two reviewers against predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. After removal of duplicates, 1594 titles were identified, of which 1586 were initially excluded. Following full-text review, four articles were included. In total, across all four studies, data from only 202 bariatric surgery participants were included, the majority of whom had had one type of surgery. Just one study included a control group. Reporting of nutritional outcomes was heterogenous, with none of the studies including complete macro and micronutrient intake results in their articles. An insufficient intake of protein was noted as a concern in two studies and associated with poor fetal growth in one study. Overall, this review has identified a paucity of data about the dietary intake of women during pregnancy after bariatric surgery.Entities:
Keywords: bariatric surgery; maternal dietary intake; metabolic surgery; pregnancy; scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31492000 PMCID: PMC6770652 DOI: 10.3390/nu11092116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flowchart.
Study characteristics.
| Authors, Year | Study Population | Location | Participants (N) | Mean/Median Age * (Years) | Pre-Pregnancy BMI (kg/m2) | Time Interval Surgery to Conception (Months) | Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dias et al. (2009) [ | Women who conceived between 0–5 years after having RYGB surgery | Brazil | 14 | 31.8 ± 6.5 | Not stated | 24.2 ± 21.6 | Retrospective medical note review |
| Guelinckx et al. (2012) [ | Pregnant women with a history of bariatric surgery | Belgium | 49: | 31 (25–36) | 31 (22–44) | 44 (4–108) | Prospective study: 7 day food diary collected in first and second trimester (weeks 7–12 and week 20) |
| Jans et al. (2018) [ | Pregnant women with a history of bariatric surgery | Belgium | 54: | 29.4 ± 4.3 | 28.1 ± 5.1 | 45.6 ± 29.9 | Prospective study: 3 day food record measured in first and third trimester (15 weeks and 32 weeks) |
| Coupaye et al. [ | Pregnant women who had bariatric surgery and at least 1 nutritional evaluation | France | 85 with dietary data: | 33.4 ± 4.7 | 31.2 ± 5.0 | 31 ± 22 | Prospective: 4 day food diary |
Age is mean ± years or median (range in brackets). BMI = Body Mass Index. RYGB = Roux en Y Gastric Banding surgery, LAGB = Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Banding, SG = Sleeve Gastrectomy surgery. * median values with interquartile range in brackets.
Key outcome measures and covariates.
| Authors | Control Group | Method of Dietary Monitoring | Dietary Outcome Measures | Results | Conclusions/Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dias et al. (2009) [ | No | Unclear–“energy and protein ingestion transcribed from patient’s chart” |
Energy intake Protein intake | Trimester 2 mean daily intake: |
Energy, but not protein intake during pregnancy was appropriate. Long term nutritional monitoring should be a priority and dietary recommendations are in clear demand. |
| Guelinckx et al. (2012) [ | No | 7 day food diary |
Energy intake Protein as % energy Total fat as % energy Saturated fat as % energy Carbohydrate as % energy Fibre Calcium Iron Diet quality (HEI score) | Trimester 1 mean daily intake |
Mean daily intake of fat and saturated fat and protein higher than recommended levels. Carbohydrate intake lower than recommended. Fibre and calcium lower than recommended. Iron intake sufficient. HEI score did not change during pregnancy and was comparable between groups. During the first trimester, 15% of participants had a healthy diet, 82% required improvement and 3% had a poor quality diet. In the second trimester, 10% had a healthy diet and 90% required improvement. Nutritional advice and lifestyle coaching recommended for this high-risk population. |
| Jans et al. (2018) [ | Yes 25 pregnant women with obesity | 3 day food record |
Energy intake Total fat intake Saturated fat intake MUFA intake PUFA intake n3 fatty acids n6 fatty acids Folate Vitamin B12 | Trimester 1 mean daily intake: |
Both surgical and obese groups consumed a diet high in saturated fatty acids and low in unsaturated fatty acids. Intakes of n3 fatty acids, folate and vitamin B12 were below Belgian dietary recommendations. Pregnancy following bariatric surgery induces high levels of anxiety that are not associated with an inadequate maternal diet. |
| Coupaye (2018) [ | No | 4 day self-reported food diary |
Energy intake Protein intake Carbohydrate intake Fat intake | Mean daily intake: |
Energy, carbohydrate and fat intake did not differ between those who had RYGB and SG. Protein intake was significantly higher in those who had RYGB, but still below the 60 g/day recommendation. Fetal growth after bariatric surgery is positively associated with maternal protein supply and negatively correlated with maternal iron status. |
Values are mean ± standard deviation unless stated. * median values with interquartile range in brackets. HEI: Healthy Eating Index MUFA: Monounsaturated fatty acids. PUFA: Polyunsaturated fatty acids RYGB: Roux en Y Gastroplasty SG: Sleeve Gastrectomy.