Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does Metformin Improve Pregnancy Outcomes (Incidence of LGA (≥90% Birth Weight Centile) Babies, Onset of Maternal GDM, Hypertension, PET, Macrosomia, Shoulder Dystocia, Admission to SCBU) in Obese Non-diabetic Women?
Obesity is on the rise in all developed countries. Of particular concern is that more young
people including children are being recognised as being overweight or obese. We know from a
recent large national enquiry into all maternal and child deaths in the UK, known as CEMACH,
that obesity is a major risk both for the mother and her child. When all deaths in women
during pregnancy are analysed, obesity comes out as the most common risk factor. Babies of
obese mothers are more than 3 times as likely to need admission to the Neonatal Intensive
Care Unit.
Traditionally, obesity is treated by lifestyle measures encouraging healthy eating and
increasing physical activity. Unfortunately these measures are often insufficient to produce
significant improvements in weight. If obese women gain little or even no weight during
pregnancy, the outcome of the pregnancy is known to be improved. This was shown in a very
large study of more than 120, 000 obese women.
The drug metformin has been used for years in the treatment of diabetes and more recently
for polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Studies in pregnant PCOS women and women with diabetes
in pregnancy have shown it to be safe and effective. Fortunately it is relatively cheap and
taken as a tablet with meals.
Metformin has the great advantage of not causing weight gain and often leads to a small
amount of weight loss. It works by improving the body's sensitivity to insulin which is
important as resistance to insulin is common in obesity.
We have a lot of experience using metformin to treat women with diabetes in pregnancy where
it is greatly beneficial. We now wish to examine its potential for obese women who do not
have diabetes. We are hoping to show that it will benefit these women by causing less weight
gain, less high blood pressure, and less diabetes. We anticipate babies will also have
better birth weights, will be easier to deliver naturally, will not need to go to special
care baby units and will be healthier.
Obesity in Pregnancy has been identified by the Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child
Health [CEMACH] report (2007) as a major health risk to mother and baby:
- 35% of women who died were obese
- 30% of the mothers who had a stillbirth or a neonatal death were obese
Obesity increases the risk of miscarriages, GDM, pregnancy-induced hypertension/PET,
Caesarean sections, deep venous thrombosis, puerperal sepsis and LGA babies. There is a
5-fold increase in costs of antenatal care. Results from various studies have concluded that
limited or no weight gain during pregnancy in obese women results in more favourable
pregnancy outcomes. By improving insulin sensitivity and enhancing GLP-1 release, metformin
is associated with weight reduction by approximately 5.8% with no serious adverse events.
The aim of this study is to test the hypothesis that management of obese non-diabetic
pregnant women with standardised life-style intervention (diet and physical activity) plus
metformin will lead to improved maternal and perinatal outcomes compared with life-style
intervention alone.
The study will also seek to determine whether metformin will improve body fat distribution
as measured by bioimpedance during pregnancy with particular emphasis on metabolic active
visceral fat.
Genetic studies will investigate whether patients with polymorphisms of the candidate fat
gene, FTO gene, differ in their response to metformin and whether this is associated with
favourable pregnancy outcomes.
This is a randomised, multicentre, double blind, placebo-controlled trial.Assuming power
90%, significance level 5% and 2-sided testing, we will recruit 425 subjects per arm of the
trial.This will allow the detection of a difference in mean centile (z-score) of 0.21
standard deviations.
All women will undergo oral glucose tolerance testing at booking and at 28 wks; those found
to have GDM at 28 weeks will commence home glucose monitoring and will receive metformin if
glucose values are outside target range.
The primary outcome will be the birth weight centile (z score). Secondary outcomes include
maternal and neonatal outcomes, body composition scores, patient satisfaction and infant
development at 2 years. The relation between FTO gene variants and pregnancy outcomes will
be examined. Parametric and non-parametric tests will be used as appropriate.
This is a multicentre trial to be undertaken in 7 centres in the UK over a period of 3 years
in order to reach the required sample size. Mr Hassan Shehata, Clinical lead and Consultant
Obstetrician and Gynecologist is the Chief Investigator of the trial and the trial will be
centrally coordinated by Dr Jyoti Balani at Epsom and St Helier University Hospital. In the
first phase of the research, we would be recruiting a total of 546 pregnant women into the
trial. 200 women would be recruited at Epsom and St Helier Hospital, 200 women at kings
college Hospital under the supervision of Professor Kypros Nicolaides and 146 at Royal
Surrey County Hospital under the supervision of Dr Lesley Roberts.
Given the low cost of metformin and the potentially high impact on health for both mother
and baby, we anticipate the study will show metformin to be highly cost-effective. We
anticipate improved patient satisfaction scores in those taking metformin as they gain less
weight and develop fewer complications. Improvements in the metabolic milieu during
interuterine growth is expected to improve long term outcome for the infants of mothers
treated with metformin.
Benefits to patients will be immediate from the time the project's findings are presented.
Implementation into clinical practice is expected to greatly benefit the NHS.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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