Metabolomics and glucose tolerance in pregnancy and postpartum: The PONCH study
Ulrika Andersson-Hall, Anders Bay Nord, Daniel Malmodin, Agneta Holmäng

TL;DR
This study explores how metabolite levels change during pregnancy and after childbirth, focusing on differences in women with obesity and gestational diabetes.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct metabolite patterns associated with obesity and gestational diabetes during pregnancy and postpartum.
Findings
Levels of branched chain amino acids (BCAAs) decrease during pregnancy, while phenylalanine, succinate, lactate, and pyruvate increase.
Pyruvate and lactate are strongly correlated with body fat and insulin resistance during pregnancy.
BCAAs and other metabolites are elevated in both obesity and gestational diabetes during late pregnancy.
Abstract
Pregnancy induces significant physiological changes, particularly important in obesity (OB) and gestational diabetes (GDM). We aimed to determine metabolite changes and their relation to clinical variables of obesity and glucose metabolism. Serum NMR metabolomics, clinical data, and body composition were determined in normoglycemic normal-weight (NW) (n = 32) and OB (n = 33) women at six time points spanning pregnancy and postpartum. Additionally, 31 GDM women (15 GDM-NW and 16 GDM-OB) were assessed during trimester 3. Profound shifts in the metabolome during pregnancy were exemplified by decreased branched chain amino acids (BCAAs) and tyrosine, and increased phenylalanine, succinate, lactate, and pyruvate. Comparison with clinical variables showed strong correlation between BCAAs’ and bodyfat and insulin resistance mainly in the non-pregnant state. Conversely, pyruvate and lactate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGestational Diabetes Research and Management · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies · Birth, Development, and Health
