Managing Pregnancy and Delivery for women with obesity A/Prof Leonie Callaway.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 12 Maternal and Fetal Nutrition Debbie Hogan RN.
Advertisements

Dr. Amel F. Al-Sayed Asst. Prof. & Consultant Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology.
THE EFFECT OF MATERNAL OBESITY AND GESTATIONAL WEIGHT GAIN ON OBSTETRIC OUTCOMES CN Khairun 1,3, I Nazimah 2, Tham Seng Woh 1 N Norzilawati 3 AM Mohd Rizal.
The ACOG Task force on hypertension in pregnancy
Dr. Shelley Wilkinson 18th June 2014.
Care of the pregnant woman Year 2 Lent term. The Case 38 year old booked at 12 weeks gestation in the antenatal clinic Expecting her third baby 1 st baby.
Diabetes and Pregnancy
Women’s Knowledge and Perceptions of the Risks of Excess Weight in Pregnancy Emma Jeffs 1, Joanna Gullam 2, Benjamin Sharp 3, Helen Paterson 1 1 Department.
Obesity and Hypertension in Pregnancy: Does it matter afterwards? Prof Leonie Callaway.
MANAGEMENT OF THE OBESE PREGNANT PATIENT Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG May 2010.
NuPAFP Conference October 13-14, 2010 Color Me Healthy Gestational Weight Gain Paula Garrett, MS, RD.
DR. TARIK Y. ZAMZAMI MD, CABOG, FICS ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR CONSULTANT OB/GYN
1 Maternal Mortality Review Team Virginia Department of Health Office of the Chief Medical Examiner Victoria M. Kavanaugh, RN, PhD Coordinator.
Preventing Infant Mortality: What We Know, What We Don’t, and What You Can Do Tom Ivester, MD, MPH UNC School of Medicine Division of Maternal Fetal Medicine.
Medical Nutrition Therapy in Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
Limitations of BMI in Pregnancy Using BMI, in pregnancy in not accurate. It should be done pre and post pregnancy. BMI does not really convey differences.
Women’s health in pregnancy and post- partum Michelle Wise BSc MD FRCSC MSc Senior Lecturer, Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, U of A Consultant.
Diabetes in pregnancy Dr. Lubna Maghur MRCOG. Diabetes is a common medical disorder effecting 2-5% of pregnancies. Diabetes is a common medical disorder.
Normal physiology of pregnancy First trimester-Increased insulin sensitivity. Late 2 nd and 3 rd trimester insulin resistance possible associated with.
Final Presentation Preventing Type 2 diabetes onset among expectant mothers with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) Kris, Emily, Kathi, & Yukiha.
Antenatal Weight Management
Dietary interventions in Obese Pregnancy: An Australian study and systematic review of the literature Professor Julie Quinlivan.
Diabetes in pregnancy James Penny Consultant Obstetrician & Gynaecologist Surrey & Sussex NHS Trust.
Healthy Pregnancy Monica Riccomini, RN, MSN Lisa Lottritz RN, BSN.
Obesity, O&G and Risk Diana Hamilton-Fairley Consultant Obstetrician and Gynaecologist Guys and St. Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust.
Life Cycle: Maternal and Infant Nutrition BIOL 103, Chapter 12-1.
Chapter 10: Special Topics in Adults & Chronic Diseases: Nutrition and Public Health Judith Sharlin, PhD, RD.
LIFESTYLE INTERVENTION You CAN’T change where you came from…….. You CAN change where you are going……
NUTRITION IN PREGNANCY Developed by D. Ann Currie, R.N., M.S.N.
Medical Management of obesity Perinatal ANGELS Conference Feb 17, 2005 Philip A. Kern.
PRE-EXISTING DIABETES AND PREGNANCY 2003 Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Prevention and Management of Diabetes in Canada.
OBesity Project Pregnancy.
Pregnancy And Lactation Copyright 2005 Wadsworth Group, a division of Thomson Learning Life Cycle Nutrition.
Diabetes in Pregnancy for Undergraduates Max Brinsmead MB BS PhD May 2015.
SOCIAL OBSTETRICS Defined as the study of the interplay of social and environmental factors and human reproduction going back to preconceptional.
Diabetes and pregnancy Great Expectations! Sister Lesley Mowat Dr Shirley Copland.
Chapter 15 Adolescent Nutrition: Conditions and Interventions
Diabetes in pregnancy- an update Seema Chakravarti MRCOG, MRCPI Consultant Obstetrician BHR Trust.
The Antenatal clinic Year 2 Lent Term. For each of the cases Think about the factors which might affect the pregnancy or labour Make some recommendations.
TEMPLATE DESIGN © Evaluation of the antenatal care and obstetric outcome of obese pregnant women and those with a healthy.
Dr Nadia ALgantri Associated professor Faculty of medicine.
Max Brinsmead MB BS PhD May Definition and Incidence  Prolonged pregnancy is defined as that proceeding beyond 42 weeks gestation  In the absence.
Pregnancy care in women with BMI>35 Dr S Sharma, Dr A Mahmud and Dr N Manheri-OthayothUniversity Hospital of Wales, Cardiff UK Pregnancy care in women.
THIRD TRIMESTER PROBLEMS Hypertension Small for dates Post-term pregnancy.
TEMPLATE DESIGN © ATTITUDES TO OBESITY IN PREGNANCY AISHA ALZOUEBI, PENELOPE LAW AND SOTIRIOS SARAVELOS HILLINGDON HOSPITAL.
POSTTERM PREGNANCY: THE IMPACT ON MATERNAL AND FETAL OUTCOME Dr. Hussein. S. Qublan- Al-Hammad Jordanian Board in Obstet &Gynecology European Board in.
Clinical Aspect of Maternal and Child Nursing NUR 363 Lecture 3
Camden Diabetes Education Day June 2014
Gestational Diabetes Gestational Diabetes. Definition Any degree of glucose intolerance with onset or 1 st recognition during pregnancy. Any degree of.
Maternal and Fetal Nutrition
Clinical Aspect of Maternal and Child Nursing NUR 363 Lecture 2
Diabetes in Pregnancy Diabetes: a leading complication in pregnancy Forms of diabetes include: –Type 1 diabetes—Results from destruction of insulin-producing.
Miss M Maitra Consultant O&G UHCW 29 April What is Diabetes Mellitus? Metabolic disorder Multiple aetiology Chronic hyperglycaemia Defects in insulin.
Maternal & Early Years Healthy Weight Service Evaluation December 2010.
BACKGROUND Despite the well established link between fetal macrosomia and maternal diabetes, it is estimated that 80% of macrosomic babies are born to.
Obesity reduction Angela Jones Consultant in Public Health
Easy to implement interventions for obesity in pregnancy Clinical Senate of Western Australia UWA Club November 2013 Professor Julie Quinlivan.
An observation of gestational weight gain in obese pregnancies Dr Julie Abayomi.
DIP, GDM; CLINICAL IMPORTANCE AND NEW WHO DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA FOR GDM
Unit 13 Nutritional Health for Pregnant and Lactating Women.
Basic Antenatal Care Package in South Africa
Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology
Antenatal care in Hyperglycemia in Pregnancy
Capacity Building for Prevention of Complication from Gestational Diabetes in Public health system, UP Dr Rajesh Jain Project Manager Diabetes Prevention.
Gestational Diabetes Lab 4.
C H A P T E R 1 9 Prolonged pregnancy and disorders of uterine action
Chelsea Stellmach, MS with Alison DiValerio, MS, RN
obesITY IN pregnanCY FOR UNDERGRADUATES
Thrombophilia in pregnancy: Whom to screen, when to treat
Dr. MSc. Raul Hernandez Canete
Presentation transcript:

Managing Pregnancy and Delivery for women with obesity A/Prof Leonie Callaway

GOAL: A PRACTICAL OUTLINE

MATERNAL OBESITY IS IMPORTANT AND COMMON

Queensland: Where Australia shines!

Maternal Obesity in Queensland 2006: 33% overweight and obese (Callaway et al, MJA, 2006) 2008: 50.5% overweight and obese (QH statbites)

Importance UK Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health Obesity is a significant risk factor for maternal mortality 35% of all mothers who died were obese ( % of the UK obstetric population are obese)

HOW DO WOMEN BECOME OBESE?

Reduced Physical Activity Increased consumption processed foods Low breastfeeding ratesSocial changesSleep debtEndocrine disrupters Decreased variability in ambient temperatures Decreased smoking Increased use of steroids and antipsychotics Pregnancy at older age in overweight women Demographic changes with older people, ethnic changes Chronic stressMicronutrient deficiency Keith et al, Int J Obesity, 2006

What do obese pregnant women eat?

Energy intake (n=50) 3 Day food recall, administered by trained dieticians All participants were within 10% of recommended daily caloric intake

Dietary intake of obese pregnant women at 12 weeks gestation (n=50) Serves / dayRecommendedMeanSt DevMinimumMaximum Breads & cereals Vegetables Fruit Dairy Meat & alternatives Extras Dietary folate (micrograms) Croaker S et al, Nutrition and Dietetics, 2010.

THE COMPLICATIONS?

Maternal Complications Thromboembolism Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy Gestational diabetes Abnormal liver function tests

Obstetric Complications Increased IOL Higher rate of failed VBAC Dramatically increased rates of C Section Increased rates of complicated normal vaginal delivery – Shoulder dystocia – Third/fourth degree lacerations – Failure to progress

Anaesthetic Complications Epidural analgesia during labour is more likely to fail as BMI increases General anaesthesia complicated by: – Postpartum sleep apnoea – Difficult intubation

Practical Difficulties Inaccurate assessment of growth, lie, presentation Blood pressure cuffs/automated blood pressure devices Vascular access Theatre beds/trolleys/staff Ultrasonography Monitoring during labour

Peripartum Neonatal Monitoring Maternal obesity associated with: – Difficulties obtaining an adequate CTG – Increased rates of fetal distress – Increased rates of meconium aspiration

Perioperative complications Increased post partum haemorrhage Endometritis Wound breakdown and infection

Perinatal Complications Length of stay>5 days – Overweight OR 1.36 – Class I and II Obese OR 1.49 – Class III Obese 3.18 (Callaway et al, 2006) For obese women: – Chest infection OR 1.34 – Genital infection OR 1.3 – Wound infection OR 1.34 – UTI OR 1.39 – PUO OR 1.29 – Prolonged postnatal stay OR 1.48 (Sebire et al, 2001)

Neonatal Complications Macrosomia Lower rates of breastfeeding Increased rates of congenital anomalies Stillbirth, neonatal death

WHAT CAN WE DO ABOUT IT?

Interesting Issues from Guidelines American College of O&G (2005) – Height and weight measured in all women – Weight gain guidelines (IOM) – Dietary advice – Consider screen for GDM at presentation – Consider cardiac evaluation if BMI>35 – Anaesthetic consultation – Careful thromboembolism prophylaxis – If not pregnant –preconception counselling, provision of information regarding risk, weight loss prior to pregnancy RCOG Consensus View (2007) – BMI should be measured in all pregnant women, and weight measured at every clinic visit; interpregnancy weight change should also be recorded – Diet, exercise and psychopathology should be attended to – Women with a BMI of over 35 should not have infertility investigation or treatment until their BMI is less than 35, and ART should be reserved for women with a BMI under 30. – Aspirin 75 mg/day from 12 weeks if BMI>35 – Consider high dose folic acid (5mg per day) – Consider antenatal thromboprophylaxis if additional risk factors – Detailed anomaly scan – GTT at 28 weeks

Interventions during pregnancy: Monitoring/Screening Weighing pregnant women Early OGTT, early ELFTs Early screening for vascular disease Anomaly screening High risk model of care with regular screening for preeclampsia –early urinary protein estimation and baseline blood pressure measurement All based on expert opinion, underpinned by good data about increased risk in obese pregnant women

When we see women at the beginning of pregnancy, can we effectively prevent complications in obese women? Preeclampsia: No good evidence yet GDM: Maybe Excessive weight gain: Yes Neonatal morbidity: No evidence yet

Therapeutic options Metformin –unstudied Diet Exercise Lifestyle intervention CPAP Probiotics

Dietary intervention to prevent weight gain – 10 x 1 hour nutrition consultations – Fat 30%, protein %, Carb 50-55% – Caloric restriction (individual calculation) Intervention N=23 Control N=27 P kJ per day 27 weeks <0.001 Total weight gain 6.6kg13.3kg0.002 Wolff et al, 2008, Int J Obesity.

Diet intervention in obese pregnant women RCT 257 women, BMI>30 Study group: – Dietitian review, – kcal/kg, – F30,P30,C40, – all >2000 cal Gained less weight (11 vs 31 lbs) Retained less weight No ketonuria Less gestational hypertension No difference in perinatal outcomes Thornton et al, J Nat Med Ass 2009

Lifestyle intervention ControlPassiveActivep Calories 2 nd trimester kCal/day <0.004 Weight gain kg No difference in physical activity No difference in any maternal, obstetric, neonatal outcomes 35 F/10P/55C Guelinckx et al, AJCN 2009

Lifestyle intervention RCT 100 women stratified for BMI Intervention group: – Dietitian visit, F30,P30,C40 – Advice re moderate intensity exercise 5 times per week Weight gain reduced in intervention group Absee et al, Obstet Gynecol 2009

Exercise in Obese Pregnant Women RCT, n=50 Individually tailored, goal directed intervention At 28 weeks: – 16/22 in intervention met targets – 8/19 in control met targets – No difference in HOMA Callaway et al, Diabetes Care, P=0.047

Is screening for and aggressive management of complications effective? Hypertensive disorders? GDM: Yes Congenital anomalies?

GDM treatment prevents preeclampsia Crowther et al, NEJM; 2005.

Interventions during pregnancy: Models of Care Guidelines support: – Multidisciplinary care (obstetricians, physicians, ultrasonographers, maternal-fetal medicine specialists, dieticians, physios, anaesthetists) – Physical requirements (beds, theatre beds etc) – High risk pregnancy care Need for health services research and detailed economic analysis of models of care Potential to examine the impact of models of care on pregnancy and neonatal outcomes

Interventions in Pregnancy: Postpartum care Guidelines and expert opinions suggest: – Timely uterotonics – Thromboprophylaxis – Surveillance for infections – Expert lactation support

Interconception Care Modest amounts of weight loss between pregnancies can reduce the risk of GDM in subsequent pregnancies Guidelines suggest: – Nutrition counselling – Exercise programs – Weight management support – Follow up of complications of pregnancy (eg hypertension, gestational diabetes) Important time in shaping family habits Potential for high quality interconception care trials

A PRACTICAL APPROACH

First Visit First visit: – Detailed history and physical examination –consider hypothyroidism, PCOS, endocrinopathies, depression. – FBC, ELFT’s, OGTT, urine protein creatinine ratio – Advice regarding diet, exercise, weight gain, smoking cessation – Consider higher dose folic acid and aspirin – Refer to obstetrician and anaesthetist – Midwife support essential – Consider risk factors for thromboprophylaxis – Multidisciplinary care – Consider appropriate facility for delivery

Subsequent visits Breastfeeding information 28 week OGTT Monitor weight gain Expert USS of fetus at weeks Ward test urine and blood pressure at every visit –low threshold for further tests for preeclampsia Ensure anaesthetic review

At delivery Skills of health care professionals and the capacity of the facility Monitoring and IV access issues Uterotonics IV antibiotic prophylaxis Thromboprophylaxis Breastfeeding support

Post partum Breastfeeding support which takes much longer than in normal weight women Watch carefully for infections Thromboprophylaxis Advise regarding weight loss and follow up for pregnancy complications