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Temporal Trends in Maternal Food Intake Frequencies and Associations with Gestational Diabetes: The Cambridge Baby Growth Study.

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Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Petry, Clive J 
Ong, Ken K 
Hughes, Ieuan A 
Acerini, Carlo L 
Dunger, David B 

Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that in the first decade of this century the incidence of gestational diabetes (GDM) in pregnancy rose worldwide. In the Cambridge Baby Growth Study cohort we observed that this temporal trend was associated with an index of multiple deprivation and reductions in indices of insulin secretion. Deprivation level was not directly associated with GDM, suggesting that the temporal trend may relate more to other factors linked to it, such as dietary composition. In this study we investigated temporal trends in perceived food intake frequencies, derived from a qualitative, short questionnaire, in 865 pregnant Cambridge Baby Growth Study (CBGS) recruits. A number of food frequency ranks showed both temporal trends and associations with GDM, but of note is the frequency of egg consumption (negative temporal trend p = 0.03, slope = -6.2 ranks/year; negative association with GDM p = 3.0 × 10-8, slope = -0.002 increased risk/rank) as it was also positively associated with the insulin disposition index (p = 1.17 × 10-3, slope = 0.42 ranks. L/mmoL). These results are consistent with a potential protective effect of factors related to the frequency of egg consumption in pregnancy. Such factors may have contributed to the observed temporal trend in GDM risk but the overall detectable effect appears to have been small.

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Funder: Wellcome Trust

Keywords

Pregnancy, Glucose, Diet, insulin secretion, Food Frequency Questionnaire

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Journal ISSN

2072-6643

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Sponsorship
Mothercare Charitable Foundation (RG54608)
National Institute for Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (RG64245)
European Union Framework 5 (QLK4-1999-01422)
World Cancer Research Fund International (2004/03)
Newlife - The Charity for Disabled Children (07/20)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12015/2, 7500001180, G1001995)