Bariatric Surgery Status Complicating Pregnancy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Glucose Homeostasis, Metabolomics and Pregnancy Outcomes After Bariatric Surgery
The aim of the GLORIA study is to determine whether an altered glucose metabolism (with more hypoglycaemia and glycaemic variability) and altered metabolomics during pregnancy after bariatric surgery contribute to the increased risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes such as small-for-gestational age infants. In addition, the investigators also aim to evaluate whether continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) can be used to diagnose gestational diabetes (GDM).
The GLORIA study is a Belgian multicenter prospective cohort study. The investigators aim to recruit 95 pregnant women after bariatric surgery (gastric bypass or sleeve gastrectomy) and as a control group, an age and BMI-matched cohort of 95 pregnant women without bariatric surgery. Participants will be recruited before 12 weeks of pregnancy. To evaluate glucose homeostasis, a masked CGM will be used for 10 days during each trimester in pregnancy and at the time of screening for GDM (at 24-28 weeks). The primary outcome is the mean glycaemia levels and glycaemic variability (SD) measured by CGM in pregnancy. At the different time points, anthropometric measurements (including body composition), food diary, questionnaires and micronutrients will be evaluated. In addition, in collaboration with the lab of Cristina Legido Quigle from the Steno Diabetes Center in Copenhagen, metabolomics will be analyzed. Women with a history of bariatric surgery will receive screening for GDM between 24-28 weeks of pregnancy by performing self- monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) with a glucometer during one week. In addition to SMBG, women will receive a masked CGM during one week. ;