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The impact of maternal hyperglycaemia first detected in pregnancy on offspring blood pressure in Soweto, South Africa

The impact of maternal hyperglycaemia first detected in pregnancy on offspring blood pressure in Soweto, South Africa
The impact of maternal hyperglycaemia first detected in pregnancy on offspring blood pressure in Soweto, South Africa
Background:
The long-term consequences for offspring born to mothers with hyperglycaemia first detected in pregnancy (HFDP) are not yet well understood and its influence on childhood blood pressure has not previously been assessed in sub-Saharan Africa.

Objective:
The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between maternal HFDP and offspring blood pressure in 3 to 6-year-old children in Soweto, South Africa.

Methods:
Oscillometric blood pressure was measured in 189 children born to mothers with and without HFDP diagnosed by 75 g 2-h oral glucose tolerance test. The 2017 AAP Guidelines for Childhood Hypertension were used as reference standard, and the term ‘elevated blood pressure’ referred to blood pressure readings above the 90th percentile for age, height and sex. The association between maternal HFDP and offspring blood pressure was analysed using multivariable linear regression.

Results:
Elevated blood pressure was identified in 49.7% of children. Maternal hyperglycaemia was not associated with offspring blood pressure when adjusted for offspring age, height and sex (SBP: 0.199, P= 0.888; DBP: 0.185, P= 0.837) or after multivariable adjustment (SBP: –0.286, P = 0.854; DBP: 0.215, P = 0.833). In the full model for SBP, child BMI age z-score was a significant predictor of blood pressure at 3–6years (1.916, P = 0.008).

Conclusion:
Although maternal HFDP was not associated with childhood blood pressure at 3–6 years, the prevalence of elevated blood pressure in this group of preschool-aged children is concerning. Future research is needed to further evaluate childhood obesity as a modifiable risk factor to reduce hypertension and cardiovascular risk in an African setting.
0263-6352
967-977
Boerstra, B.A.
58f05e1c-2c1a-442f-86d7-83fcf7cde3c1
Soepnel, L.M.
5a89deee-06a8-4a04-b4e6-cae60b0350f1
Nicolaou, V.
ce74335b-4acd-47ec-946b-eb926c7762f0
Kolkenbeck-Ruh, A.
3e7433c8-e1ea-48ac-9243-f299f321daf8
Kagura, J.
f073669d-6128-4847-a825-725112f4cf25
Ware, L.J.
74860e6c-ac74-44ae-bb62-a7a2032852ba
Norris, S.A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Klipstein-Grobusch, K.
3ad61933-41fc-4d32-83de-6e86af6d9fe9
Boerstra, B.A.
58f05e1c-2c1a-442f-86d7-83fcf7cde3c1
Soepnel, L.M.
5a89deee-06a8-4a04-b4e6-cae60b0350f1
Nicolaou, V.
ce74335b-4acd-47ec-946b-eb926c7762f0
Kolkenbeck-Ruh, A.
3e7433c8-e1ea-48ac-9243-f299f321daf8
Kagura, J.
f073669d-6128-4847-a825-725112f4cf25
Ware, L.J.
74860e6c-ac74-44ae-bb62-a7a2032852ba
Norris, S.A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Klipstein-Grobusch, K.
3ad61933-41fc-4d32-83de-6e86af6d9fe9

Boerstra, B.A., Soepnel, L.M., Nicolaou, V., Kolkenbeck-Ruh, A., Kagura, J., Ware, L.J., Norris, S.A. and Klipstein-Grobusch, K. (2022) The impact of maternal hyperglycaemia first detected in pregnancy on offspring blood pressure in Soweto, South Africa. Journal of Hypertension, 40 (5), 967-977. (doi:10.1097/HJH.0000000000003102).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background:
The long-term consequences for offspring born to mothers with hyperglycaemia first detected in pregnancy (HFDP) are not yet well understood and its influence on childhood blood pressure has not previously been assessed in sub-Saharan Africa.

Objective:
The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between maternal HFDP and offspring blood pressure in 3 to 6-year-old children in Soweto, South Africa.

Methods:
Oscillometric blood pressure was measured in 189 children born to mothers with and without HFDP diagnosed by 75 g 2-h oral glucose tolerance test. The 2017 AAP Guidelines for Childhood Hypertension were used as reference standard, and the term ‘elevated blood pressure’ referred to blood pressure readings above the 90th percentile for age, height and sex. The association between maternal HFDP and offspring blood pressure was analysed using multivariable linear regression.

Results:
Elevated blood pressure was identified in 49.7% of children. Maternal hyperglycaemia was not associated with offspring blood pressure when adjusted for offspring age, height and sex (SBP: 0.199, P= 0.888; DBP: 0.185, P= 0.837) or after multivariable adjustment (SBP: –0.286, P = 0.854; DBP: 0.215, P = 0.833). In the full model for SBP, child BMI age z-score was a significant predictor of blood pressure at 3–6years (1.916, P = 0.008).

Conclusion:
Although maternal HFDP was not associated with childhood blood pressure at 3–6 years, the prevalence of elevated blood pressure in this group of preschool-aged children is concerning. Future research is needed to further evaluate childhood obesity as a modifiable risk factor to reduce hypertension and cardiovascular risk in an African setting.

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More information

Submitted date: 29 June 2021
Accepted/In Press date: 19 January 2022
Published date: May 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504750
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504750
ISSN: 0263-6352
PURE UUID: b58c9a0f-d077-4988-a898-fb05afc6f7a5
ORCID for S.A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2025 16:58
Last modified: 19 Sep 2025 02:02

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Contributors

Author: B.A. Boerstra
Author: L.M. Soepnel
Author: V. Nicolaou
Author: A. Kolkenbeck-Ruh
Author: J. Kagura
Author: L.J. Ware
Author: S.A. Norris ORCID iD
Author: K. Klipstein-Grobusch

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