| Literature DB >> 35215386 |
Katinka Snoek1, Nadia van de Woestijne1, Sten Willemsen1,2,3, René Klaassen4, Sander Galjaard1, Joop Laven5, Régine Steegers-Theunissen1, Sam Schoenmakers1.
Abstract
Post-bariatric weight loss can cause iatrogenic malnutrition and micronutrient depletion. In this study, we evaluated the impact of gastric bypass surgery (GB) and multivitamin supplement use on maternal micronutrient status before and across pregnancy. A retrospective medical chart review of 197 singleton pregnancies after GB with a due date between 2009 and 2019 was performed at a bariatric expertise center in the Netherlands. Hemoglobin, calcium, iron status, folate, vitamin D, vitamin B12 and ferritin levels were determined before and after GB during standard follow-up and at all gestational trimesters and analyzed using linear mixed models. Patients were prescribed standard multivitamin supplements or multivitamins specifically developed for post-bariatric patients (FitForMe WLS Forte (FFM)). Overall, hemoglobin and calcium levels decreased after surgery and during pregnancy, whereas folate, vitamin D, and vitamin B12 levels increased, and iron levels remained stable. FFM use was associated with higher hemoglobin, folate, vitamin D, and ferritin levels. In conclusion, through adequate supplementation and follow-up, GB does not have to result in impaired micronutrient status. Supplements developed specifically for post-bariatric patients generally result in higher micronutrient values than regular multivitamins before and during pregnancy. These data emphasize the urgent need for nutritional counseling including dietary and multivitamin supplement advise for post-bariatric women contemplating and during pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: gastric bypass; malnutrition; micronutrients; periconception; pregnancy; supplements; treatments; vitamin status
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35215386 PMCID: PMC8876006 DOI: 10.3390/nu14040736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Normal situation versus altered situation after gastric bypass surgery.
Baseline characteristics of the included post-gastric bypass pregnancies (n = 197), the Netherlands, 2009–2019.
| Characteristic | Study Population |
|---|---|
| Age at conception in years | |
| Median | 29.8 (26.6–33.4) |
| Missing | 0 |
| Parity | |
| Nulliparous | 78 (39.6) |
| Missing | 0 |
| Educational level | |
| Low | 33 (17.5) |
| Intermediate | 122 (58.7) |
| High | 45 (23.8) |
| Missing | 9 |
| Comorbidity | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 11 (5.6) |
| Hypertension | 13 (6.7) |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 2 (1.0) |
| Asthma/COPD | 30 (15.4) |
| Hypothyroidism | 24 (12.3) |
| Missing | 2 |
| Period between surgery and conception in months | 18.7 (10.2–31.3) |
| Missing | 16 |
| BMI before surgery (kg/m2) * | |
| Median | 43.3 (40.9–46.2) |
| Missing | 0 |
| BMI at conception (kg/m2) | |
| Median | 29.0 (26.6–32.5) |
| Missing | 44 |
| Geographic origin | |
| Caucasian | 122 (63.2) |
| African | 12 (6.2) |
| Asian | 1 (0.5) |
| Other/mixed | 58 (30.1) |
| Missing | 4 |
Descriptive statistics were used to describe patient characteristics, and variables were tested for normal distribution. Numbers are presented as n (valid %) or median (IQR). * BMI = body mass index.
Estimated marginal means of hemoglobin and micronutrient levels before gastric bypass surgery, after surgery, and during pregnancy, the Netherlands, 2009–2019.
|
| ||||
| Estimated marginal means (mmol/L) | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Before surgery | 8.30 | 0.059 | 8.184 | 8.416 |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 8.10 | 0.062 | 7.979 | 8.221 |
| First trimester | 7.79 | 0.057 | 7.677 | 7.903 |
| Second trimester | 7.21 | 0.060 | 7.092 | 7.328 |
| Third trimester | 6.99 | 0.063 | 6.868 | 7.113 |
|
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| Estimated marginal means (nmol/L) | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Before surgery | 12.0 | 1.13 | 9.785 | 14.215 |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 22.0 | 1.14 | 19.766 | 24.234 |
| First trimester | 31.7 | 1.11 | 29.524 | 33.876 |
| Second trimester | 31.7 | 1.13 | 29.485 | 33.915 |
| Third trimester | 27.5 | 1.33 | 24.893 | 30.107 |
|
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| Estimated marginal means (mmol/L) | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Before surgery | 2.38 | 0.009 | 2.363 | 2.397 |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 2.33 | 0.010 | 2.311 | 2.349 |
| First trimester | 2.30 | 0.010 | 2.281 | 2.319 |
| Second trimester | 2.24 | 0.009 | 2.222 | 2.258 |
| Third trimester | 2.23 | 0.013 | 2.205 | 2.255 |
|
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| Estimated marginal means (µmol/L) | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Before surgery | 12.6 | 0.588 | 11.448 | 13.752 |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 14.9 | 0.629 | 13.667 | 16.133 |
| First trimester | 16.1 | 0.583 | 14.957 | 17.243 |
| Second trimester | 14.7 | 0.630 | 13.465 | 15.935 |
| Third trimester | 14.2 | 0.737 | 12.755 | 15.645 |
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| Estimated marginal means (pmol/L) | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Before surgery | 257.24 | 1.056 | 230.442 | 287.149 |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 357.81 | 1.065 | 316.494 | 404.518 |
| First trimester | 327.01 | 1.058 | 292.790 | 365.236 |
| Second trimester | 290.04 | 1.058 | 259.885 | 323.681 |
| Third trimester | 320.54 | 1.062 | 284.919 | 360.610 |
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| Estimated marginal means (nmol/L) | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Before surgery | 33.0 | 1.9 | 29.276 | 36.724 |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 53.2 | 1.99 | 49.300 | 57.100 |
| First trimester | 49.3 | 1.86 | 45.654 | 52.946 |
| Second trimester | 48.4 | 1.96 | 44.558 | 52.242 |
| Third trimester | 48.4 | 2.15 | 44.186 | 52.614 |
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| Estimated marginal means (µg/L) | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Before surgery | 50.6 | 6.05 | 38.742 | 62.458 |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 68.2 | 6.39 | 55.676 | 80.724 |
| First trimester | 55.7 | 5.85 | 44.234 | 67.166 |
| Second trimester | 37.0 | 6.06 | 25.122 | 48.878 |
| Third trimester | 34.3 | 7.29 | 20.012 | 48.588 |
* All micronutrient values represent absolute differences, whereas vitamin B12 values represent relative differences. For vitamin B12, a difference of 0.05 corresponds with a difference of 5%. Linear mixed models were used, unadjusted model.
Figure 2Maternal hemoglobin and micronutrient status before and during pregnancy, the Netherlands, 2009-2019. All values between the lower and upper limits are within the normal range. (a) Maternal hemoglobin status. (b) Maternal folate status. * 45.3 nmol/L is the upper measurable limit for folate. (c) Maternal iron status. (d) Maternal vitamin B12 status. (e) Maternal vitamin D status. (f) Maternal calcium status. (g) Maternal ferritin status.
The associations between gastric bypass surgery, hemoglobin, and micronutrient concentrations after gastric bypass surgery before and during pregnancy, the Netherlands, 2009–2019. The timepoint ‘before surgery’ is used as reference category.
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 0.069 | 0.072 | –0.072 | 0.211 |
| First trimester | 0.171 | 0.088 | –0.001 | 0.342 |
| Second trimester | 0.701 | 0.095 | 0.515 | 0.887 |
| Third trimester | 0.906 | 0.101 | 0.709 | 1.103 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | –9.087 | 1.501 | –12.029 | –6.145 |
| First trimester | –18.872 | 1.754 | –22.311 | –15.434 |
| Second trimester | –18.893 | 1.937 | –22.688 | –15.097 |
| Third trimester | –14.783 | 2.071 | –18.842 | –10.724 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 0.037 | 0.012 | 0.014 | 0.061 |
| First trimester | 0.057 | 0.013 | 0.030 | 0.083 |
| Second trimester | 0.110 | 0.016 | 0.079 | 0.141 |
| Third trimester | 0.122 | 0.017 | 0.088 | 0.156 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | –2.027 | 0.867 | –3.727 | –0.327 |
| First trimester | –3.313 | 0.983 | –5.240 | –1.385 |
| Second trimester | –1.744 | 1.130 | –3.959 | 0.471 |
| Third trimester | –1.570 | 1.182 | –3.887 | 0.748 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | –0.245 | 0.086 | –2.093 | –1.123 |
| First trimester | –0.072 | 0.104 | –0.748 | 0.356 |
| Second trimester | 0.087 | 0.107 | –0.334 | 0.807 |
| Third trimester | 0.009 | 0.111 | –0.568 | 0.753 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | –2.179 | 2.473 | –7.026 | 2.668 |
| First trimester | –2.118 | 3.002 | –8.001 | 3.766 |
| Second trimester | 2.046 | 3.275 | –4.372 | 8.464 |
| Third trimester | –2.108 | 3.458 | –8.884 | 4.669 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | –25.684 | 8.546 | –42.434 | –8.935 |
| First trimester | –18.306 | 9.998 | –37.902 | 1.291 |
| Second trimester | –5.117 | 10.666 | –26.023 | 15.789 |
| Third trimester | –1.045 | 11.424 | –23.436 | 21.346 |
* All micronutrient values represent absolute differences, whereas vitamin B12 values represent relative differences. For vitamin B12, a difference of 0.05 corresponds with a difference of 5%. Linear mixed models were used, adjusted for season, ferric carboxymaltose infusions, vitamin B12 injections, diabetes mellitus, ethnicity, smoking, educational level, age at blood draw, time interval between blood draw and bariatric surgery, first versus consecutive pregnancy, BMI before surgery, and multivitamin use.Vitamin Supplements: FitForMe WLS Forte® versus Standard Supplements
The associations between gastric bypass surgery, hemoglobin, and micronutrient concentrations in (1) FitForMe versus other multivitamin supplementation (after surgery before pregnancy) and (2) FitForMe versus standard pregnancy multivitamin (during pregnancy), the Netherlands, 2009–2019. The FitForMe group is used as a reference category.
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 0.106 | 0.103 | –0.096 | 0.309 |
| First trimester | 0.213 | 0.105 | 0.006 | 0.420 |
| Second trimester | 0.031 | 0.114 | –0.194 | 0.255 |
| Third trimester | 0.426 | 0.123 | 0.184 | 0.667 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 6.953 | 2.117 | 2.803 | 11.103 |
| First trimester | 3.179 | 2.353 | –1.433 | 7.791 |
| Second trimester | 1.038 | 2.360 | –3.587 | 5.663 |
| Third trimester | 3.230 | 2.577 | –1.821 | 8.281 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 0.006 | 0.020 | –0.032 | 0.045 |
| First trimester | –0.002 | 0.021 | –0.043 | 0.038 |
| Second trimester | –0.007 | 0.023 | –0.052 | 0.038 |
| Third trimester | –0.023 | 0.024 | –0.070 | 0.025 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 0.674 | 1.243 | –1.763 | 3.112 |
| First trimester | 1.839 | 1.215 | –0.543 | 4.221 |
| Second trimester | 1.597 | 1.306 | –0.963 | 4.157 |
| Third trimester | 1.557 | 1.613 | –1.605 | 4.719 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 0.125 | 0.329 | 0.781 | –0.518 |
| First trimester | 1.074 | 0.343 | 1.743 | 0.404 |
| Second trimester | 0.919 | 0.343 | 1.591 | 0.246 |
| Third trimester | 0.424 | 0.437 | 1.281 | –0.432 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 7.941 | 3.657 | 0.774 | 15.108 |
| First trimester | 6.519 | 3.501 | –0.343 | 13.381 |
| Second trimester | 8.659 | 3.719 | 1.369 | 15.948 |
| Third trimester | 11.302 | 4.116 | 3.234 | 19.369 |
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| Beta | Standard error | Lower confidence interval (2.5%) | Upper confidence interval (97.5%) | |
| Preconceptionally after surgery | 15.952 | 11.640 | –6.862 | 38.766 |
| First trimester | 29.430 | 12.726 | 4.488 | 54.373 |
| Second trimester | 23.572 | 12.776 | –1.470 | 48.614 |
| Third trimester | 7.846 | 13.825 | –19.250 | 34.943 |
* All micronutrient values represent absolute differences, whereas vitamin B12 values represent relative differences. For vitamin B12, a difference of 0.05 corresponds with a difference of 5%. Linear mixed models were used, adjusted for season, ferric carboxymaltose infusions, vitamin B12 injections, diabetes mellitus, ethnicity, smoking, educational level, age, time interval between blood draw and bariatric surgery, first vs. consecutive pregnancy, and BMI at blood draw.