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Periconceptional diet and the risk of gestational diabetes in south Indian women: findings from the BAngalore Nutrition Gestational diabetes LiFEstyle Study (BANGLES)

Periconceptional diet and the risk of gestational diabetes in south Indian women: findings from the BAngalore Nutrition Gestational diabetes LiFEstyle Study (BANGLES)
Periconceptional diet and the risk of gestational diabetes in south Indian women: findings from the BAngalore Nutrition Gestational diabetes LiFEstyle Study (BANGLES)

Background: gestational diabetes can predispose two generations-a mother and her child-to a higher risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes. Culture-specific strategies to prevent gestational diabetes are required. BANGLES investigated the associations between women's periconceptional diet and gestational diabetes risk.

Methods: BANGLES was a prospective observational study (n=785), in which women of various socioeconomic status were recruited at 5-16 weeks' gestation in Bangalore, India. Periconceptional diet was recalled at recruitment, using a validated 224-item food frequency questionnaire, that was reduced to 21 food groups for the food group-gestational diabetes analysis, and 68 food groups for the principal component analysis for a diet pattern-gestational diabetes analysis. Diet-gestational diabetes associations were examined using multivariate logistic regression, adjusting for a priori confounders determined from the literature. Gestational diabetes was assessed by a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test at 24-28 weeks' gestation, applying 2013 WHO criteria.

Findings: women who consumed whole-grain cereals (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0·58, 95% CI 0·34-0·97, p=0·03); had moderate egg consumption (>1-3 times per week) compared with less than once per week (adjusted OR 0·54, 95% CI 0·34-0·86, p=0·01); and a higher weekly intake of pulses and legumes (adjusted OR 0·81, 95% CI 0·66-0·98, p=0·03), nuts and seeds (adjusted OR 0·77, 95% CI 0·63-0·94, p=0·01), and fried and fast food (adjusted OR 0·72, 95% CI 0·59-0·89, p=0·002) had a lower gestational diabetes. None of these associations was significant after correction for multiple testing. A high-diversity, urban diet pattern characterised by diverse home-cooked and processed foods and associated with older, affluent, educated, urban women was associated with a lower risk (adjusted OR 0·80, 95% CI 0·64-0·99, p=0·04). BMI was the strongest risk factor for gestational diabetes and possibly mediated the diet pattern-gestational diabetes associations.

Interpretation: The same food groups that were associated with a lower gestational diabetes risk were components of the high-diversity, urban diet pattern. One healthy diet pattern might not be relevant to India. Findings support global recommendations to encourage women to attain a healthy pre-pregnancy BMI, increase diet diversity to prevent gestational diabetes, and have policies to increase food affordability.

Funding: Schlumberger Foundation.

Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Diabetes, Gestational/epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, India/epidemiology, Diet, Nutritional Status
2214-109X
S4-S4
Mahendra, Anvesha
dd66cd67-47dc-4f29-87e3-61f3ab4fcd0f
Kehoe, Sarah H.
17aff028-df58-48b9-8e45-e1b353f61537
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
de6f872c-7339-4a52-be84-e3bbae707744
Krishnaveni, G.V.
eb73f522-17b0-4aa9-a7c7-df0014ced8c3
Arun, Nalini
3111d1e4-89b0-42cc-a6bc-21e3892a332c
Pidaparthy, Padmaja
84f503f0-2d57-49e8-a93d-03f70252e0c7
Kini, Prakash
003f96c0-c3ee-4292-8096-cd847a5cc59a
Taskeen, Unaiza
b189602d-6603-46d4-b166-35f599a8ec22
Fall, Caroline H.D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Mahendra, Anvesha
dd66cd67-47dc-4f29-87e3-61f3ab4fcd0f
Kehoe, Sarah H.
17aff028-df58-48b9-8e45-e1b353f61537
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
de6f872c-7339-4a52-be84-e3bbae707744
Krishnaveni, G.V.
eb73f522-17b0-4aa9-a7c7-df0014ced8c3
Arun, Nalini
3111d1e4-89b0-42cc-a6bc-21e3892a332c
Pidaparthy, Padmaja
84f503f0-2d57-49e8-a93d-03f70252e0c7
Kini, Prakash
003f96c0-c3ee-4292-8096-cd847a5cc59a
Taskeen, Unaiza
b189602d-6603-46d4-b166-35f599a8ec22
Fall, Caroline H.D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18

Mahendra, Anvesha, Kehoe, Sarah H., Kumaran, Kalyanaraman, Krishnaveni, G.V., Arun, Nalini, Pidaparthy, Padmaja, Kini, Prakash, Taskeen, Unaiza and Fall, Caroline H.D. (2023) Periconceptional diet and the risk of gestational diabetes in south Indian women: findings from the BAngalore Nutrition Gestational diabetes LiFEstyle Study (BANGLES). The Lancet Global Health, 11 (Suppl. 1), S4-S4. (doi:10.1016/S2214-109X(23)00089-X).

Record type: Meeting abstract

Abstract

Background: gestational diabetes can predispose two generations-a mother and her child-to a higher risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes. Culture-specific strategies to prevent gestational diabetes are required. BANGLES investigated the associations between women's periconceptional diet and gestational diabetes risk.

Methods: BANGLES was a prospective observational study (n=785), in which women of various socioeconomic status were recruited at 5-16 weeks' gestation in Bangalore, India. Periconceptional diet was recalled at recruitment, using a validated 224-item food frequency questionnaire, that was reduced to 21 food groups for the food group-gestational diabetes analysis, and 68 food groups for the principal component analysis for a diet pattern-gestational diabetes analysis. Diet-gestational diabetes associations were examined using multivariate logistic regression, adjusting for a priori confounders determined from the literature. Gestational diabetes was assessed by a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test at 24-28 weeks' gestation, applying 2013 WHO criteria.

Findings: women who consumed whole-grain cereals (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0·58, 95% CI 0·34-0·97, p=0·03); had moderate egg consumption (>1-3 times per week) compared with less than once per week (adjusted OR 0·54, 95% CI 0·34-0·86, p=0·01); and a higher weekly intake of pulses and legumes (adjusted OR 0·81, 95% CI 0·66-0·98, p=0·03), nuts and seeds (adjusted OR 0·77, 95% CI 0·63-0·94, p=0·01), and fried and fast food (adjusted OR 0·72, 95% CI 0·59-0·89, p=0·002) had a lower gestational diabetes. None of these associations was significant after correction for multiple testing. A high-diversity, urban diet pattern characterised by diverse home-cooked and processed foods and associated with older, affluent, educated, urban women was associated with a lower risk (adjusted OR 0·80, 95% CI 0·64-0·99, p=0·04). BMI was the strongest risk factor for gestational diabetes and possibly mediated the diet pattern-gestational diabetes associations.

Interpretation: The same food groups that were associated with a lower gestational diabetes risk were components of the high-diversity, urban diet pattern. One healthy diet pattern might not be relevant to India. Findings support global recommendations to encourage women to attain a healthy pre-pregnancy BMI, increase diet diversity to prevent gestational diabetes, and have policies to increase food affordability.

Funding: Schlumberger Foundation.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 2 March 2023
Published date: 2 March 2023
Keywords: Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Diabetes, Gestational/epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, India/epidemiology, Diet, Nutritional Status

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490649
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490649
ISSN: 2214-109X
PURE UUID: 12afc9ea-24c9-4f44-9a0a-06dc0f54f5f0
ORCID for Caroline H.D. Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

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Date deposited: 31 May 2024 16:58
Last modified: 01 Jun 2024 01:32

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Contributors

Author: Anvesha Mahendra
Author: Sarah H. Kehoe
Author: G.V. Krishnaveni
Author: Nalini Arun
Author: Padmaja Pidaparthy
Author: Prakash Kini
Author: Unaiza Taskeen

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