Objectively recorded physical activity and the association with gestational diabetes
Mørkrid, Kjersti; Jenum, Anne Karen; Berntsen, Sveinung; Sletner, Line; Richardsen, Kåre Rønn; Vangen, Siri; Holme, Ingar Morten K; Birkeland, Kåre I.
Original version
10.1111/sms.12183Abstract
The aim of this population-based study was to assess the
association between objectively recorded physical activity
(PA) in early gestation and gestational diabetes mellitus
(GDM) identified at 28 weeks of gestation in a multiethnic
cohort of healthy pregnant women in Oslo,
Norway. In total, 759 women were included. In early
gestation (<20 weeks), light-, moderate-, and vigorousintensity
PA and number of steps were objectively
recorded (SenseWear™ Armband Pro3), and selfreported
PA, demographics, and anthropometrics were
collected. The 75-g oral glucose tolerance test was performed
at 28 weeks of gestation. Women with GDM had
fewer objectively recorded steps (mean 7964 steps/day vs
8879 steps/day, P < 0.001) and minutes of moderate-tovigorous-intensity
PA (median 62 min/day vs 75 min/day,
P = 0.004) in early gestation than women without GDM.
Additionally, 30% of women with GDM compared with
44% (P < 0.001) of women without GDM self-reported
regular PA before pregnancy. The significant inverse association
between objectively recorded steps per day in
early gestation and GDM persisted after adjustment for
ethnic origin, weeks of gestation, age, parity, prepregnancy
BMI, early life socioeconomic position, and
self-reported regular PA before pregnancy. The adjusted
odds ratio for GDM decreased 19% per standard deviation
(3159 steps) increase in objectively recorded steps
per day (P = 0.039). Daily life PA in early gestation measured
as steps/day was associated with lower risk of
GDM.
Description
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