Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension Diet and Activity to Limit Gestational Weight: Maternal Offspring Metabolics Family Intervention Trial, a Technology Enhanced Randomized Trial

Technology-enhanced antenatal diet and lifestyle intervention could prevent excess gestational weight gain and benefit mother and child. A randomized clinical trial. Overweight and obese ethnically diverse pregnant women in Chicago, Illinois, were enrolled between October 2012 and December 2015, wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of preventive medicine 2018-11, Vol.55 (5), p.603-614
Hauptverfasser: Van Horn, Linda, Peaceman, Alan, Kwasny, Mary, Vincent, Eileen, Fought, Angela, Josefson, Jami, Spring, Bonnie, Neff, Lisa M., Gernhofer, Niki
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container_end_page 614
container_issue 5
container_start_page 603
container_title American journal of preventive medicine
container_volume 55
creator Van Horn, Linda
Peaceman, Alan
Kwasny, Mary
Vincent, Eileen
Fought, Angela
Josefson, Jami
Spring, Bonnie
Neff, Lisa M.
Gernhofer, Niki
description Technology-enhanced antenatal diet and lifestyle intervention could prevent excess gestational weight gain and benefit mother and child. A randomized clinical trial. Overweight and obese ethnically diverse pregnant women in Chicago, Illinois, were enrolled between October 2012 and December 2015, with antenatal data collection completed by July 2016. Analysis was completed June 2017. Participants were randomized when their fetus was gestational age 16 weeks to dietitian-led Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet and physical activity coaching that was received as three individual and six group counseling sessions by phone and webinar. A commercially available smartphone application was used for self-monitoring diet and physical activity. Telephone, text message prompts, and e-mail reminders encouraged adherence and website viewing. Usual-care, “web-watcher” participants were e-mailed biweekly newsletters and publicly available maternity website links. The primary outcome was gestational weight gain measured at baseline, 24 weeks, and 35.0–36.6 weeks. Secondary outcomes included weekly rate of gestational weight gain, newborn anthropometrics, maternal diet quality, physical activity, and blood pressure. Among 281 participants randomized (n=140 in intervention, n=141 in usual care, BMI 25 to
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.amepre.2018.06.015
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A randomized clinical trial. Overweight and obese ethnically diverse pregnant women in Chicago, Illinois, were enrolled between October 2012 and December 2015, with antenatal data collection completed by July 2016. Analysis was completed June 2017. Participants were randomized when their fetus was gestational age 16 weeks to dietitian-led Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet and physical activity coaching that was received as three individual and six group counseling sessions by phone and webinar. A commercially available smartphone application was used for self-monitoring diet and physical activity. Telephone, text message prompts, and e-mail reminders encouraged adherence and website viewing. Usual-care, “web-watcher” participants were e-mailed biweekly newsletters and publicly available maternity website links. The primary outcome was gestational weight gain measured at baseline, 24 weeks, and 35.0–36.6 weeks. Secondary outcomes included weekly rate of gestational weight gain, newborn anthropometrics, maternal diet quality, physical activity, and blood pressure. Among 281 participants randomized (n=140 in intervention, n=141 in usual care, BMI 25 to &lt;40, and age range 18–40 years), 37% were non-white and 274 completed antenatal data collection (n=139 in the intervention group and n=135 in the usual-care group). Gestational weight gain differed significantly by intervention group (difference, 1.7kg, p=0.01) and rate of weight gain was 0.4 (SD=0.2) vs 0.5 (SD=0.2) kg/week. No significant differences were noted in birth weight, percentage body fat, or adverse pregnancy outcomes, but more cesarean sections (55 [40%] vs 37 [27%]) occurred among the intervention group. Technology-enhanced Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet and lifestyle intervention resulted in significantly less total gestational weight gain over 35 weeks with no adverse infant outcomes. Nutrient quality improved without an adverse impact on rate of prematurity. Increased cesarean delivery requires further exploration. The National Academy of Medicine goals were not achieved by the majority of participants. Obesity prevention preconception is needed. 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A randomized clinical trial. Overweight and obese ethnically diverse pregnant women in Chicago, Illinois, were enrolled between October 2012 and December 2015, with antenatal data collection completed by July 2016. Analysis was completed June 2017. Participants were randomized when their fetus was gestational age 16 weeks to dietitian-led Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet and physical activity coaching that was received as three individual and six group counseling sessions by phone and webinar. A commercially available smartphone application was used for self-monitoring diet and physical activity. Telephone, text message prompts, and e-mail reminders encouraged adherence and website viewing. Usual-care, “web-watcher” participants were e-mailed biweekly newsletters and publicly available maternity website links. The primary outcome was gestational weight gain measured at baseline, 24 weeks, and 35.0–36.6 weeks. Secondary outcomes included weekly rate of gestational weight gain, newborn anthropometrics, maternal diet quality, physical activity, and blood pressure. Among 281 participants randomized (n=140 in intervention, n=141 in usual care, BMI 25 to &lt;40, and age range 18–40 years), 37% were non-white and 274 completed antenatal data collection (n=139 in the intervention group and n=135 in the usual-care group). Gestational weight gain differed significantly by intervention group (difference, 1.7kg, p=0.01) and rate of weight gain was 0.4 (SD=0.2) vs 0.5 (SD=0.2) kg/week. No significant differences were noted in birth weight, percentage body fat, or adverse pregnancy outcomes, but more cesarean sections (55 [40%] vs 37 [27%]) occurred among the intervention group. Technology-enhanced Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet and lifestyle intervention resulted in significantly less total gestational weight gain over 35 weeks with no adverse infant outcomes. Nutrient quality improved without an adverse impact on rate of prematurity. Increased cesarean delivery requires further exploration. The National Academy of Medicine goals were not achieved by the majority of participants. Obesity prevention preconception is needed. 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subjects Birth weight
Blood pressure
Body fat
Body mass index
Body weight
Cesarean section
Childbirth & labor
Clinical research
Clinical trials
Coaching
Data collection
Diet
Email
Evidence-based medicine
Exercise
Fetuses
Gestational age
Group counseling
Hypertension
Infants
Internet
Intervention
Lifestyles
Medicine
Metabolism
Mothers
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Obesity
Pregnancy
Prenatal care
Technology
Text messaging
Websites
Weight control
title Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension Diet and Activity to Limit Gestational Weight: Maternal Offspring Metabolics Family Intervention Trial, a Technology Enhanced Randomized Trial
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