New Guidelines from ACOG

(deactivated member)
on 6/14/09 10:59 pm - TN
These were just released last month.

You cannot review the original article without a professional membership, but please feel free to cross-post this to other boards. I've taken care of R&R and the DS board.

ACOG Issues Guidelines on Managing Obesity in Pregnancy

Laurie Barclay, MD

June 9, 2009 — The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) has issued a practice bulletin to summarize the risks for obesity in pregnancy and outcomes of pregnancy after bariatric surgery as well as to provide recommendations for management during pregnancy and delivery after bariatric surgery. The new guidelines are published in the June issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology.

"Obesity is associated with reduced fertility primarily as a result of oligo-ovulation and anovulation," write Michelle A. Kominiarek, MD, and colleagues from the ACOG. "The increased risks for gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, cesarean delivery, and infectious morbidity associated with obesity are well established....Obese patients are more likely to be admitted earlier in labor, need labor induction, require more oxytocin, and have longer labor."

To identify pertinent articles published in the English language between January 1975 and November 2008, the guidelines authors searched the MEDLINE database, the Cochrane Library, and ACOG's own internal resources and documents. The reviewers gave priority to articles reporting findings from original research and also consulted review articles and commentaries, but they did not consider abstracts of research presented at symposia and scientific conferences. Using the method outlined by the US Preventive Services Task Force, the reviewers evaluated the identified studies for methodologic quality.

Recommendations from professional societies including ACOG and the National Institutes of Health were also reviewed. Reference lists from identified articles were used to help identify additional studies. When reliable research findings were not available, the reviewers used expert opinions from obstetrician-gynecologists as a basis for their recommendations.

Specific conclusions and clinical recommendations based on limited or inconsistent scientific evidence (level B) are as follows:

• Because pregnancy rates after bariatric surgery in adolescents are twice that in the general adolescent population, contraceptive counseling is especially important in these patients.

• Administration of hormonal contraception by nonoral routes should be considered in patients with a significant malabsorption component after bariatric surgery because these patients have an increased risk for oral contraception failure.

• Testing drug levels may be necessary for medications in which a therapeutic drug level is critical to ensure a therapeutic effect.

Specific conclusions and clinical recommendations based primarily on consensus and expert opinion (level C) are as follows:

• There should be a high index of suspicion for gastrointestinal tract surgical complications when pregnant women who have had bariatric procedures present with significant abdominal symptoms.

• Bariatric surgery should not be performed with the intention of treating infertility, although fertility may improve in association with rapid postoperative weight loss.

• Bariatric surgery in and of itself does not mandate cesarean delivery, although the rate of cesarean delivery in these patients may approach 62%.

• Despite the lack of consensus regarding the treatment of pregnant patients who have had an adjustable gastric banding procedure, it is suggested that these patients have early consultation with a bariatric surgeon.

• For patients who have had bariatric surgery that may be associated with malabsorption and/or dumping syndrome, alternative testing for gestational diabetes should be considered.

• After conception, consultation with a nutritionist may facilitate adherence to dietary regimens and allow the patient to cope with the physiologic changes of pregnancy.

• For women who have had bariatric surgery, a wide-spectrum assessment for micronutrient deficiencies should be considered at the beginning of pregnancy.

As a proposed performance measure, the guidelines authors suggest documentation of counseling regarding weight gain and nutrition in pregnancy.

Additional points made by the authors of the practice bulletin include the following:

• Specific complications of obesity in pregnancy include doubling to quadrupling of the risk for stillbirth.

• Waiting 12 to 24 months after bariatric surgery before conceiving may be helpful to avoid exposing the fetus to an environment of rapid maternal weight loss and to allow the patient to achieve full weight loss goals.

• If pregnancy occurs earlier than 12 to 24 months after bariatric surgery, closer surveillance of maternal weight and nutritional status, including ultrasound for serial monitoring of fetal growth, may be beneficial and should be considered.

• After bariatric surgery, there is a reduced risk for hypertension, pregestational diabetes, gestational diabetes, and preeclampsia, as well as of large-for-gestational-age infants and macrosomia.

• After bariatric surgery, the risk for premature rupture of membranes is increased, but the risk for preterm delivery, congenital anomalies, and perinatal death is not increased.

"As the rate of obesity increases, it is becoming more common for providers of women's health care to encounter patients who are either contemplating or have had operative procedures for weight loss, also known as bariatric surgery," the guidelines authors write. "The counseling and management of patients who become pregnant after bariatric surgery can be complex. Although pregnancy outcomes generally have been favorable after bariatric surgery, nutritional and surgical complications can occur and some of these complications can result in adverse perinatal outcomes."

Obstet Gynecol. 2009;113:1405-1413.

[CLOSE WINDOW]

Authors and Disclosures

Journalist

Laurie Barclay, MD

Laurie Barclay, MD, is a freelance writer and reviewer for Medscape.

 
jojobear98
on 6/15/09 12:36 am - Gettysburg, PA
Thanks for sharing!

When life hands you lemons, ask for tequila & salt and give me a call!


 

 

(deactivated member)
on 6/15/09 1:10 am - TN
You're welcome!
biggeekgirl
on 6/15/09 5:54 am

Thanks for posting this!  Great to read....

Bet most of the patients studied were RNYers....but it's still good to see that someone is studying bariatric surgery and pregnancy.

Cindy

Surgery on 4/25/05 , Dr. Alverdy in Chicago.  God Bless the DS !!!
Highest Weight = 412lbs, Surgery Weight = 359lbs, Current Weight = 155lbs (5'7" tall)http://www.picturetrail.com/gid8138761
 Lilypie



 
(deactivated member)
on 6/15/09 11:19 am - TN
I especially like the part about not making dumpers drink the concentrated glucose solution--duh! 
Most Active
Recent Topics
Post Preganancy Weight Gain
nko_88 · 3 replies · 1426 views
Procare prenatal vitamins?
liz52408 · 2 replies · 955 views
Glucose test
marianacc · 9 replies · 1459 views
×