Results From a European Multicenter Randomized Trial of Physical Activity and/or Healthy Eating to Reduce the Risk of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus: The DALI Lifestyle Pilot

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • David Simmons
  • Judith G M Jelsma
  • Sander Galjaard
  • Roland Devlieger
  • Andre van Assche
  • Goele Jans
  • Rosa Corcoy
  • Juan M Adelantado
  • Fidelma Dunne
  • Gernot Desoye
  • Jürgen Harreiter
  • Alexandra Kautzky-Willer
  • Dorte M Jensen
  • Lise Lotte Andersen
  • Annunziata Lapolla
  • Maria Dalfra
  • Alessandra Bertolotto
  • Ewa Wender-Ozegowska
  • Agnieszka Zawiejska
  • David Hill
  • Pablo Rebollo
  • Frank J Snoek
  • Mireille N M van Poppel

OBJECTIVE: Ways to prevent gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) remain unproven. We compared the impact of three lifestyle interventions (healthy eating [HE], physical activity [PA], and both HE and PA [HE+PA]) on GDM risk in a pilot multicenter randomized trial.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Pregnant women at risk for GDM (BMI ≥29 kg/m2) from nine European countries were invited to undertake a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test before 20 weeks' gestation. Those without GDM were randomized to HE, PA, or HE+PA. Women received five face-to-face and four optional telephone coaching sessions, based on the principles of motivational interviewing. A gestational weight gain (GWG) <5 kg was targeted. Coaches received standardized training and an intervention toolkit. Primary outcome measures were GWG, fasting glucose, and insulin sensitivity (HOMA) at 35-37 weeks.

RESULTS: Among the 150 trial participants, 32% developed GDM by 35-37 weeks and 20% achieved GWG <5 kg. HE women had less GWG (-2.6 kg [95% CI -4.9, -0.2]; P = 0.03) and lower fasting glucose (-0.3 mmol/L [-0.4, -0.1]; P = 0.01) than those in the PA group at 24-28 weeks. HOMA was comparable. No significant differences between HE+PA and the other groups were observed.

CONCLUSIONS: An antenatal HE intervention is associated with less GWG and lower fasting glucose compared with PA alone. These findings require a larger trial for confirmation but support the use of early HE interventions in obese pregnant women.

Original languageEnglish
JournalDiabetes Care
Volume38
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)1650-6
Number of pages7
ISSN0149-5992
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sep 2015

    Research areas

  • Adult, Diabetes, Gestational, Europe, Feeding Behavior, Female, Glucose Tolerance Test, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Life Style, Motivational Interviewing, Motor Activity, Obesity, Pilot Projects, Pregnancy, Risk Reduction Behavior, Weight Gain

ID: 161993144