ktlight
12th May 2011, 11:36
One hundred obese mums-to-be will be given Metformin as part of a three-year study to tackle obesity rates and reduce the number of difficult births.
Patients at Liverpool Women's Hospital will be given the drug to reduce the food supply to their unborn babies, although it will not help the mums themselves to lose weight.
Leading the trial, senior lecturer in obstetrics, Dr Andrew Weeks, said: "It is about trying to improve outcomes in pregnancy for women who are overweight.
"The problem is babies tend to be larger and many of the downsides of being overweight during pregnancy relate to the birth."
Metformin reduces blood sugar levels which are passed onto babies in the womb, and is already regularly used to treat diabetic mums-to-be, as well as diabetics in general.
During the study, half of the patients will take Metformin pills up to three times a day from 12 weeks gestation, while the other half will be given placebo drugs.
Doctors hope it will prevent the birth of oversized babies, thereby reducing the need for caesarean sections.
Instances of pre-eclampsia, the potentially fatal complication in pregnancy common to overweight mothers, are also hoped to be reduced.
The trial will run as a joint study between hospitals in Liverpool, Coventry and Edinburgh and will monitor over 400 women in total.
Dr Weeks added: "The difficulty comes when you have been living in a particular way for years that is not healthy.
"To suddenly change to a different lifestyle is not easy to do.
"Lifestyle change takes time and we would always encourage this as well but the use of Metformin gives us another option when the other is not realistic."
However, a leading expert behind the UK's fastest growing weight loss organisation has voiced concerns over giving pregnant women drugs to prevent them having obese babies.
CEO of All About Weight, Alison Wetton, said: "Women rightfully feel uneasy - no mother-to-be likes to take medication.
"The fact that the widely-used diabetes pill, Metformin, is being trialled to prevent obese babies being born to overweight mothers is disturbing to me, and I am sure most other women as well."
Will Williams, scientific advisor for All About Weight, added that, although there were "reasonable grounds" for the trial, it was "a shame that it is needed at all".
He said: "We know Metformin is safe in pregnancy and has no negative effects on the child up to 2 years, but there is a lack of studies on older children.
source
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/8505630/Babies-given-anti-obesity-drugs-in-the-womb.html
Patients at Liverpool Women's Hospital will be given the drug to reduce the food supply to their unborn babies, although it will not help the mums themselves to lose weight.
Leading the trial, senior lecturer in obstetrics, Dr Andrew Weeks, said: "It is about trying to improve outcomes in pregnancy for women who are overweight.
"The problem is babies tend to be larger and many of the downsides of being overweight during pregnancy relate to the birth."
Metformin reduces blood sugar levels which are passed onto babies in the womb, and is already regularly used to treat diabetic mums-to-be, as well as diabetics in general.
During the study, half of the patients will take Metformin pills up to three times a day from 12 weeks gestation, while the other half will be given placebo drugs.
Doctors hope it will prevent the birth of oversized babies, thereby reducing the need for caesarean sections.
Instances of pre-eclampsia, the potentially fatal complication in pregnancy common to overweight mothers, are also hoped to be reduced.
The trial will run as a joint study between hospitals in Liverpool, Coventry and Edinburgh and will monitor over 400 women in total.
Dr Weeks added: "The difficulty comes when you have been living in a particular way for years that is not healthy.
"To suddenly change to a different lifestyle is not easy to do.
"Lifestyle change takes time and we would always encourage this as well but the use of Metformin gives us another option when the other is not realistic."
However, a leading expert behind the UK's fastest growing weight loss organisation has voiced concerns over giving pregnant women drugs to prevent them having obese babies.
CEO of All About Weight, Alison Wetton, said: "Women rightfully feel uneasy - no mother-to-be likes to take medication.
"The fact that the widely-used diabetes pill, Metformin, is being trialled to prevent obese babies being born to overweight mothers is disturbing to me, and I am sure most other women as well."
Will Williams, scientific advisor for All About Weight, added that, although there were "reasonable grounds" for the trial, it was "a shame that it is needed at all".
He said: "We know Metformin is safe in pregnancy and has no negative effects on the child up to 2 years, but there is a lack of studies on older children.
source
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/8505630/Babies-given-anti-obesity-drugs-in-the-womb.html