Maternal Insulin Resistance and Preeclampsia: Obstetrics
Maternal Insulin Resistance and Preeclampsia: Obstetrics
Maternal Insulin Resistance and Preeclampsia: Obstetrics
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OBSTETRICS
Cite this article as: Hauth JC, Clifton RG, Roberts JM, et al. Maternal insulin resistance and preeclampsia. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2011;204:327.e1-6.
From the Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Alabama, Birmingham, School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL (Dr Hauth);
The George Washington University Biostatistics Center, Washington, DC (Dr Clifton); University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA (Dr Roberts);
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH (Dr Myatt); the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, Bethesda, MD (Dr Spong); University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX (Dr Leveno); University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, UT (Dr Varner); Columbia University, New York, NY (Dr Wapner); University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC
(Dr Thorp); Case Western Reserve UniversityMetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, OH (Dr Mercer); Northwestern University, Chicago,
IL (Dr Peaceman); University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX (Dr Ramin); Brown University, Providence, RI (Dr
Carpenter); The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH (Dr Samuels); Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA (Dr Sciscione); Oregon Health &
Science University, Portland, OR (Dr Tolosa); University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX (Dr Saade); Wayne State University,
Detroit, MI (Dr Sorokin); and University of Texas Medical Center, Galveston, TX (Dr Anderson). The other members of the Eunice Kennedy
Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units Network are listed in this full-length
article.
Presented orally and as a poster presentation at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine, San Francisco, CA, Feb. 7-12,
2011.
The racing flag logo above indicates that this article was rushed to press for the benefit of the scientific community.
Received Dec. 9, 2010; revised Jan. 14, 2011; accepted Feb. 3, 2011.
Reprints: John C. Hauth, MD, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 619 19th St. South176F, Suite
10360, Birmingham, AL 35249-7333. jchauth@uab.edu.
Supported by grants from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) (HD34208, HD27869,
HD40485, HD40560, HD40544, HD34116, HD40512, HD21410, HD40545, HD40500, HD27915, HD34136, HD27860, HD53118, HD53097,
HD27917, and HD36801), the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and the National Center for Research Resources (M01 RR00080, UL1
RR024989). The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Metabolism Core Laboratory is supported by the Nutrition Obesity Research Center (NORC,
P30-DK56336), Diabetes Research and Training Center (DRTC, P60DK079626), and Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCTS,
UL1RR025777).
The contents of this article do not necessarily represent the official view of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Center for Research Resources, or the National Institutes of Health.
0002-9378/free 2011 Published by Mosby, Inc. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2011.02.024
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were included in the trial had blood samples that were collected at randomization, at 24 and 32 weeks gestation, and
at admission for delivery. Information
about whether the women fasted for
12 hours (even though they were not
specifically instructed to fast for any of
these visits) was collected. Women were
included in this secondary analysis if
they had a blood sample that had been
collected from 22-26 weeks gestation
and had fasted for 12 hours before the
blood collection. The study was approved by the Institutional Review
Boards of each clinical site and the data
coordinating center.
The diagnosis of hypertension was based
on blood-pressure measurements that had
been obtained during or after the 20th
week of pregnancy, excluding intraoperative blood pressures and intrapartum systolic pressures. Severe pregnancy-associated
hypertension was defined as a systolic pressure of 160 mm Hg or a diastolic pressure of 110 mm Hg on 2 occasions 2-240
hours apart or a single blood-pressure
measurement that was severely elevated
that led to treatment with an antihypertensive medication. Mild pregnancy-associated
hypertension was defined as a systolic pressure of 140-159 mm Hg or a diastolic pressure of 90-109 mm Hg on 2 occasions
2-240 hours apart. Mild preeclampsia was
defined as mild pregnancy-associated
hypertension with documentation of proteinuria within 72 hours before or after an
elevated blood-pressure measurement.
Proteinuria was defined as total protein excretion of 300 mg in a 24-hour urine
sample or 2 on dipstick testing or a
protein-to-creatinine ratio of 0.35 if a
24-hour urine sample was not available.
Severe preeclampsia was defined as preeclampsia with either severe pregnancy-associated hypertension or protein excretion
of 5 g in a 24-hour urine sample or as
mild pregnancy-associated hypertension
with oliguria (500 mL in a 24-hour urine
sample), pulmonary edema (confirmed
by radiography), or thrombocytopenia
(platelet count of 100,000 per cubic millimeter). Preeclampsia included mild and
severe preeclampsia, HELLP (hemolysis,
elevated liver enzymes, and low platelet
count) syndrome, and eclampsia. To determine the diagnosis of preeclampsia, deidentified medical charts of all women
with pregnancy-associated hypertension
were reviewed centrally by at least 3
reviewers.
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TABLE 1
Characteristic
P value
Maternal age, y
23.6 4.9
23.5 5.3
.03
12.3 1.8
13.5 2.1
.01
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
a
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.01
Race, n (%)
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Hispanic
307 (25.9)
2776 (31.6)
African American
260 (21.9)
2258 (25.7)
White/other
620 (52.2)
3748 (42.7)
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
b
.13
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
2
39 (3.3)
235 (2.7)
580 (48.9)
4325 (49.3)
286 (24.1)
2335 (26.6)
228 (19.2)
1561 (17.8)
54 (4.5)
323 (3.7)
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
2
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
2
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
2
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
2
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.40
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Vitamins
581 (48.9)
4412 (50.2)
Placebo
606 (51.1)
4370 (49.8)
296 (24.9)
1,991 (22.7)
.08
202 (17.0)
1,349 (15.4)
.14
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
a
13.0 2.6
Education level, y
12.8 2.7
.01
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
a
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Systolic
109 10
109 10
.35
Diastolic
66 8
65 8
.04
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
a
Data are given as mean SD; Study entry was 9-16 weeks gestation.
b
Statistical analysis
Insulin resistance was evaluated across
body mass index categories with the Cochran-Armitage test for trend. Other categoric variables were compared with the use
of the 2 test. Percentiles for each week of
gestation were determined for insulin, glucose, HOMA-IR, and QUICKI with the
use of the data from the women from this
cohort who were normotensive and nonproteinuric. For each marker (insulin, glucose, HOMA-IR, QUICKI), the BreslowDay test for homogeneity was used to
determine whether there was a difference
in the effect of body mass index among
women who were Hispanic, African
American, white, or other. Multivariable
logistic regression analysis was used to calculate odds ratios and included race or ethnic group, body mass index, and blood
pressure at study entry (9-16 weeks gestational age), treatment group (vitamins,
placebo), and gestational age at sampling.
For all statistical tests, a nominal probability value of .05 was considered to indicate statistical significance; no adjustments
were made for multiple comparisons.
Analyses were performed using SAS software (SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC).
R ESULTS
A total of 10,154 women were assigned
randomly in the parent trial; outcome data
were available for 9969 women. Although
68% of these women had a study sample
available between 22-26 weeks gestation,
only 1187 women (12%) had a 12-hour
fasting sample available for analysis. Population characteristics of women with and
without fasting samples are detailed in Ta-
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TABLE 2
Maternal body mass index and fasting glucose and insulin levels and insulin resistance at midgestationa
Body mass index,
kg/m2
18.5
Glucose >75th
percentile, %
Insulin >75th
percentile, %
HOMA-IR >75th
percentile, %
QUICKI <25th
percentile, %
39
15.4
17.9
15.4
15.4
18.524.9
580
20.9
18.0
18.0
18.2
25.029.9
286
29.7
28.7
28.7
28.4
30.039.9
228
36.4
37.7
37.3
37.3
54
53.7
51.9
50.0
51.9
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
40
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
HOMA-IR, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance; QUICKI, quantitative insulin sensitivity check index.
a
Trend, P .0001.
HOMA-IR results and the 25th percentile for QUICKI were chosen after other
cutoffs were considered; the greatest significance was achieved with these percentiles. The frequency of glucose, insulin, and HOMA-IR results at 75th
percentile and QUICKI levels at 25th
percentile significantly increased with
increasing body mass index (trend, P
.0001). At midtrimester, obese women
were approximately 2 times more likely
than normal weight women to have a
fasting glucose, insulin, and HOMA-IR
results of 75th percentile and QUICKI
level of 25th percentile (Table 2).
Hispanic women had a higher percentage of glucose, insulin, and HOMA-IR of
75th percentile and QUICKI level 25th
percentile, compared with African American and white women (P .001; Table 3).
Compared with white women, African
American women had a higher percentage
of insulin and HOMA-IR results of 75th
percentile and QUICKI level of 25th percentile (P .001, Table 3) but not glucose
of 75th percentile (P .86; Table 3).
There was a significant interaction between race and body mass index (under/
normal weight, overweight/obese) for glucose, insulin and HOMA-IR level of 75th
percentile and QUICKI of 25th percentile. Among the 568 overweight or obese
women, 48% of the Hispanic women, 34%
of the African American women, and 28%
of the white women had a HOMA-IR result of 75th percentile.
As expected, the 44 women (3.7%) in
the cohort with gestational diabetes mellitus were significantly more likely to
have glucose and HOMA-IR results of
75th percentile and QUICKI results of
25th percentile than women without
gestational diabetes mellitus (glucose,
59% vs 26% [P .0001]; HOMA-IR,
43% vs 25% [P .007]; QUICKI 43% vs
25% [P .007]). Although the women
with gestational diabetes mellitus were
more likely to have an insulin level of
75th percentile compared with nondiabetic women, this was not statistically
significant (39% vs 25%; P .05).
In the overall cohort, 85 women experienced preeclampsia; 592 women remained normotensive and nonproteinuric, and 510 women had an elevated
blood pressure or proteinuria, but not
TABLE 3
Maternal race/ethnicity and fasting glucose and insulin levels and insulin resistance at midgestation
Race
Glucose >75th
percentile, %
Insulin >75th
percentile, %
HOMA-IR >75th
percentile, %
QUICKI <25th
percentile, %
Hispanic
307
39.4
43.1
42.2
41.8
African American
260
23.5
26.8
27.2
27.2
White/other
620
22.9
17.0
16.9
17.2
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
HOMA-IR, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance; QUICKI, quantitative insulin sensitivity check index.
Hauth. Insulin resistance and preeclampsia. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2011.
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TABLE 4
Preeclampsia, %a
Normal, %b
37.6
26.5
1.7 (1.02.7)
1.5 (0.92.5)
40.5
25.3
2.0 (1.33.2)
1.8 (1.03.1)
40.5
24.8
2.1 (1.33.3)
1.9 (1.13.2)
40.5
25.0
2.0 (1.33.3)
1.9 (1.13.2)
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
HOMA-IR, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance; QUICKI, quantitative insulin sensitivity check index.
a
n 85 women; b n 592 women; c Adjusted for race or ethnic group, body mass index and blood pressure at study entry, treatment group, and gestational age at sampling.
C OMMENT
After the data were controlled for body
mass index, race, ethnicity, treatment
group, enrollment blood pressure, and
gestational age at sampling, midtrimester
fasting HOMA-IR results of 75th percentile and QUICKI of 25th percentile
remain significant risk factors for subsequent preeclampsia. In low-risk nulliparous women, increasing body mass index
and Hispanic/African American ethnicity/
race were associated significantly with
HOMA-IR result of 75th percentile and
QUICKI of 25th percentile between 22
and 26 weeks gestation.
Insulin resistance describes a decreased sensitivity to insulin in regard to
glucose disposal and to the inhibition of
hepatic glucose production. The gold
standard for direct testing of insulin resistance is by euglycemic glucose clamp
testing.12 Direct testing is time consuming, labor intense, and expensive, requires an experienced operator, and is
not feasible for epidemiologic studies,
large clinical trials, or routine clinical
use. We used 2 indirect surrogates in this
analysis, the HOMA-IR and QUICKI
methods. These indirect indices are dependent on a required fasting basal state
(12 hours), glucose in the normal
range, and the assumption that insulin
levels are stable and that hepatic glucose
production is constant. Glucose homeostasis is a feedback loop that involves hepatic glucose production and insulin secretion from beta cells.9 The HOMA-IR
and QUICKI methods describe the glucose-insulin homeostasis loop by em-
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
We thank the following Subcommittee members: Sabine Bousleiman, RNC, MSN, MPH,
and Margaret Cotroneo, RN, protocol development and coordination between clinical research centers; Elizabeth Thom, PhD, protocol/
data management and statistical analysis, and
Gail D. Pearson, MD, ScD, protocol development and oversight.
The following individuals comprise the Eunice
Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units Network: D.J. Rouse, A.
Northen, P. Files, J. Grant, M. Wallace, K. Bailey
(University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL); S. Caritis, T. Kamon, M. Cotroneo, D.
Fischer (University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,
PA);P. Reed, S. Quinn (LDS Hospital), V. Morby
(McKay-Dee Hospital), F. Porter (LDS Hospital), R. Silver, J. Miller (Utah Valley Regional
Medical Center), K. Hill (University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, UT); S. Bousleiman, R. Alcon, K.
Saravia, F. Loffredo, A. Bayless (Christiana), C.
Perez (St. Peters University Hospital), M. Lake
(St. Peters University Hospital), M. Talucci (Columbia University, New York, NY); K. Boggess,
K. Dorman, J. Mitchell, K. Clark, S. Timlin (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel
Hill, NC); J. Bailit, C. Milluzzi, W. Dalton, C. Brezine, D. Bazzo (Case Western Reserve University-MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland,
OH); J. Sheffield, L. Moseley, M. Santillan, K.
Buentipo, J. Price, L. Sherman, C. Melton, Y.
Gloria-McCutchen, B. Espino (University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas,
TX); M. Dinsmoor (Evanston NorthShore), T.
Matson-Manning, G. Mallett (Northwestern Uni-
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