The purpose of this study is to devise and pilot a BMI-based prenatal vitamin for obese pregnant women. Currently, all pregnant women, regardless of body mass index, take the same prenatal vitamin. The investigators have found that obese pregnant women have higher levels of inflammation and oxidative stress, and a concomitant depletion of specific antioxidant micronutrients. The investigators have also found, in an animal model, that decreasing inflammation and oxidative stress during obese pregnancy was associated with improved offspring outcomes. Here the investigators aim to understand whether a BMI-based prenatal vitamin is effective in decreasing markers of inflammation and oxidative stress by raising concentrations of antioxidant micronutrients and in pregnancies complicated by obesity.
The investigators' central hypothesis is that pregnancy in obese women creates an oxidant/anti-oxidant imbalance, which adversely impacts maternal health and neonatal outcome. The investigators hypothesize that restoring oxidant/anti-oxidant balance with a body mass index (BMI) based prenatal micronutrient supplement will decrease oxidative stress. The investigators aim to devise a prenatal vitamin supplement based on maternal BMI to increase serum levels of antioxidant vitamins in obese pregnancy, to assess how the BMI-based prenatal vitamin supplementation impacts markers of oxidative stress and inflammation in obese pregnant women and to evaluate the effectiveness of this vitamin formulation in reducing oxidative stress and inflammation and improving growth trajectories in infants born to obese women. The investigators will conduct a double-blind randomized-controlled study. Two groups of women will be randomized independently. 1) Obese women (BMI\>30) planning pregnancy through the through advertising and mailings (N=50) and 2) Pregnant women who are early in pregnancy (\<13 weeks) will be approached at their first prenatal visit at the BWH and BIDMC obstetric practices (N=120). Women will be prescreened and approached by study staff if they qualify. After informed consent is obtained, patients will be randomized to either control or intervention group by computer-generated permuted block randomization. All subjects will be given a standard prenatal vitamin provided by the study and in addition, the control group will be given a placebo and the Intervention group will be given a supplement with vitamin C, E, B6 and folate. The outcomes are maternal systemic markers inflammation and oxidative stress and micronutrients. At the time points mentioned above, the following laboratory assays will be conducted in maternal blood or urine: C reactive protein, vitamins C, E, B6, folate 8-iso-PGF2a and 8-OHdG. The secondary outcomes are cord blood markers of inflammation and oxidative stress, breastfeeding outcomes, and the following infant outcomes over the first year: neurodevelopmental outcome, growth trajectories and adiposity, systemic markers of inflammation and oxidative stress.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
146
The intervention group receives additional antioxidant micronutrients that we have found to be decreased in obese pregnant women.
Standard prenatal vitamin
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Maternal systemic marker of inflammation
Serum C Reactive Protein
Time frame: 35-40 weeks of pregnancy
Maternal systemic marker of oxidative stress
Urinary 8-Oh-dG
Time frame: 35-40 weeks of pregnancy
Maternal antioxidant vitamins
Plasma Vitamin C
Time frame: 35-40 weeks of pregnancy
Maternal antioxidant vitamins
Serum Vitamin B6
Time frame: 35-40 weeks of pregnancy
Maternal antioxidant vitamins
Serum Vitamin E
Time frame: 35-40 weeks of pregnancy
Maternal antioxidant vitamins
Serum and Red Blood Cell folate
Time frame: 35-40 weeks of pregnancy
Cord blood marker of inflammation
Serum C Reactive Protein
Time frame: Delivery
Cord blood markers of oxidative stress
8-epi-PGF2 alpha
Time frame: Delivery
Breastfeeding intensity
Complete questionnaire on infant feeding
Time frame: two, six and twelve months postpartum
Infant weight
Measure infant weight (kg)
Time frame: birth, 6 months and one year
Infant length
length (cm) measured using a length board
Time frame: birth, six months and one year
Infant head circumference
head circumference (cm) will be measured using tape measure technique
Time frame: birth, six months and one year
Infant adiposity
adiposity by peapod measurement at birth and by skin fold thickness at birth, six months and one year
Time frame: birth, six months and one year
Infant marker of inflammation
Serum C Reactive Protein
Time frame: 1 year
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