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Gaining too much weight in pregnancy is associated with adverse pregnancy complications and can have a long-term impact on maternal and offspring health, including increased risk for obesity and metabolic disease. Preventing excessive gestational weight gain could reduce adverse pregnancy outcomes and improve long-term health of mothers and offspring. Thirty obese (BMI ≥30) pregnant women will be recruited for this pilot study and randomly assigned to the Lifestyle Intervention ForEver (LIFE) program or routine care (RC). Participants will be enrolled before 18 weeks gestation and will be followed until 12 weeks after delivery. Women in the LIFE program will be given guidance on healthy eating and exercise at their regularly scheduled obstetric visits. To increase adherence to the program, a contingency management (CM) intervention offering incentives will be used to establish and maintain healthy nutrition and physical activity habits, working towards the goal of restricted weight gain (± 10lb) during their pregnancy. Three study testing visits will be scheduled for all participants: at study entry, 34-36 weeks gestation, and 12 weeks after delivering. Primary outcomes include adherence to the LIFE program, weight change in pregnancy and postpartum, and objective measures of maternal and offspring health.
Full description
The ultimate goal of this research is to examine the impact of a healthy lifestyle intervention, targeting weight gain restriction during pregnancy in obese women (BMI≥30kg/m2), on maternal and fetal outcomes.
The overarching research program has 3 main objectives:
To establish an effective contingency management behavioral program (LIFE), increasing adherence to nutritional recommendations and exercise guidelines during pregnancy.
To examine the impact of the LIFE program on weight gain restriction during pregnancy and postpartum weight loss in obese women in comparison to the RC group.
To examine the impact of the LIFE program on short- and long-term maternal and offspring outcomes at study enrollment, 34-36 weeks gestation and 3 months postpartum in obese women in comparison to the RC group.
The experimental hypotheses to be tested are that participation in the LIFE intervention in obese pregnant women will prevent excessive weight gain and/or achieve weight maintenance (± 10 lb) during pregnancy and will result in 7-10% weight loss at 12 weeks postpartum. Secondly, we hypothesize that participation in the LIFE intervention in obese pregnant women will be associated with improved aerobic capacity, reduced incidence of obstetric complications and reduced rates of LGA as a result of beneficial alterations to metabolic intrauterine environment for fetal growth.
With regard to this IRB application, we will be conducting a pilot and feasibility trial to address the following specific aims:
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Exclusion criteria
Aged < 18 years or > 40 years
BMI < 30 kg/m2 at study screening
Multiple gestations
Previously diagnosed with type 1 or type 2 diabetes mellitus
Subjects will be excluded from the study if they present with any absolute or relative contraindications to exercise in pregnancy (as defined by ACOG); determined by completion of medical questionnaire by supervising physician
Any evidence of:
i. Drug or alcohol abuse ii. Presence of any unstable psychiatric disorder iii. Plans to move away from the geographical area within the next nine months iv. Other medical or behavioral factors that, in the judgement of the supervising physician, may interfere with their ability to take part in a lifestyle intervention program during pregnancy.
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30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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