Diet quality and blood pressure among pregnant women with overweight or obesity: A secondary analysis of two randomized controlled trials

Type Article

Journal article

Authors

Lynch S, Killeen SL, O'Brien E, Mullane K, Hokey E, Mealy G, McAuliffe FM.

Year of publication

2024

Publication/Journal

Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand

Volume

103

Issue

6

Pages

1073-1082

Abstract

Introduction: Maternal obesity is a significant risk factor for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. High diet quality may protect against this, yet data regarding the relationship between diet quality and blood pressure among pregnant women with raised body mass index (BMI) is limited. Material and methods: This is a secondary analysis (n = 543) of women with BMI ≥25 kg/m2 from two randomized controlled trials; PEARS (Pregnancy Exercise and nutrition Research Study with smartphone application support) and ROLO (Randomized cOntrol trial of LOw glycemic index diet to prevent macrosomia in euglycemic women). Blood pressure was measured at 10-18 weeks and 28 weeks of pregnancy. Mean arterial pressure was calculated as (diastolic blood pressure + 1 3 × [systolic blood pressure − diastolic blood pressure]). Diet quality was assessed using 3-day food diaries, and Alternative Healthy Eating Index for Pregnancy (AHEI-P) scores were generated, quantifying alignment of food intakes with dietary guidelines in first and early third trimesters. The cohort was divided based on AHEI-P tertiles to explore differences at an alpha significance value of