作者
Denice S. Feig,Lois Donovan,Bernard Zinman,Johanna Sanchez,Elizabeth Asztalos,Edmond A. Ryan,I. George Fantus,Eileen K. Hutton,Anthony Armson,Lorraine L. Lipscombe,David Simmons,Jon Barrett,Paul J. Karanicolas,Siobhan Tobin,David McIntyre,Simon Yu Tian,George Tomlinson,Kellie E. Murphy,Denice S. Feig,D. Donat,Shital Gandhi,Barbara Cleave,Vivian Zhou,Effie Viguiliouk,Debbie Fong,Michele Strom,Melissa Deans,Aarthi Kamath,Ariane Godbout,Florence Weber,Michèle Mahone,Bi Lan Wo,Marie‐Josée Bédard,Melanie Robinson,Sylvie Daigle,Sophie Leblanc,Sora Ludwig,Sherri A. Pockett,Laurie Slater,Lois Donovan,Carolyn Oldford,Catherine Young,Heidi Virtanen,Abhay Lodha,E Gluckman,Jennifer M. Yamamoto,Claire Gougeon,Cheryl Verhesen,Afshan Zahedi,Nashwah Y. Taha,Marci Turner,Madalena Neculau,Cathy Robb,Krystyna Szwiega,Grace Lee,Évelyne Rey,Samuel Perreault,Jillian Coolen,Anthony Armson,Thomas Ransom,R. Palma Dias,Janet Slaunwhite,Darlene Baxendale,Cora A. Fanning,Ilana Halperin,Veronica Gale,Tina Kader,Heidi Hirsimaki,Hélène Long,Julie Lambert,Annie Castonguay,Steve Chalifoux,Ruth McManus,Margaret Watson,Anne-Marie Powell,Munira Sultana,Vinolia Arthur‐Hayward,Mauricio Marin,Lorraine Cauchi,Leila MacBean,Erin Keely,Janine Malcolm,Heather Clark,Allan Karovitch,Heather G. Belanger,Josée Champagne,K.-H. Schütt†,Jennifer L. Sloan,Joyce Mitchell,Colette Favreau,Elaine O’Shea,Debbie McGuire,Mei Peng,Delvin Omer,Julie Lee,Jennifer A. Klinke,Sharon Young,Julie Lee,Agnieszka Barts,F.Benjamin Carr,Peter Subrt,David B. Miller,Karen Coles,Sarah E Capes,Galina Smushkin,R J Phillips,C M Fergusson,Stacey Lacerte,Robyn L. Houlden,Adriana Breen,Bonnie Stone-Hope,Edmond A. Ryan,Sarah Kwong,Heather Rylance,Rshmi Khurana,Tammy McNab,Shirley Beauchamp,S. John Weisnagel,Martin D'Amours,Cathy Allen,M G Dube,Valérie-Ève Julien,Camille Lambert,Marie-Claude Bourbonniere,Louise Rheaume,Myriam Bouchard,George Carson,Suzanne Williams,Maria Wolfs,Howard Berger,Alice Cheng,Joel G. Ray,Amir Hanna,Leanne De Souza,Leslie Berndl,S. J. Meltzer,Natasha Garfield,Amira El‐Messidi,Laurence Bastien,Shari Segal,David Thompson,Kenneth Lim,Jason Kong,Sharon V. Thompson,Christine Orr,Brenda Galway,Minnie Parsons,Krista Rideout,Bernadette Rowe,Joan Crane,Wiuiam Andrews,Carol Joyce,Jill Newstead-Angel,Judy Brandt,Simona Meier,Josephine Laurie,David McIntyre,Helen G. Liley,Jane Fox,Helen L. Barrett,Frances B. Maguire,Marnie Nerdal-Bussell,Wenjun Nie,Courtney Bergan,B Cavallaro,Anne Tremellen,Anne Cook,David J. Simmons,Rohit Rajagopal,Lisa Vizza,Maureen Mattick,Claudia Bishop,Jodie Nema,Renee Kludas,Mark McLean,Susan Hendon,Allison Sigmund,Vincent Wong,Prem Lata,Hamish Russell,Razita Singh,Bernard Zinman,Elizabeth Asztalos,George Fantus,Lorraine L. Lipscombe,Jon Barrett,George Tomlinson,Kellie E. Murphy,Keitha McMurray,Paul J. Karanicolas,Helen Murphy,Johanna Sanchez,Gail Klein,Simon Tian,Siobhan Tobin,Kathryn Mangoff
摘要
Although metformin is increasingly being used in women with type 2 diabetes during pregnancy, little data exist on the benefits and harms of metformin use on pregnancy outcomes in these women. We aimed to investigate the effects of the addition of metformin to a standard regimen of insulin on neonatal morbidity and mortality in pregnant women with type 2 diabetes.In this prospective, multicentre, international, randomised, parallel, double-masked, placebo-controlled trial, women with type 2 diabetes during pregnancy were randomly assigned from 25 centres in Canada and four in Australia to receive either metformin 1000 mg twice daily or placebo, added to insulin. Randomisation was done via a web-based computerised randomisation service and stratified by centre and pre-pregnancy BMI (<30 kg/m2 or ≥30 kg/m2) in a ratio of 1:1 using random block sizes of 4 and 6. Women were eligible if they had type 2 diabetes, were on insulin, had a singleton viable pregnancy, and were between 6 and 22 weeks plus 6 days' gestation. Participants were asked to check their fasting blood glucose level before the first meal of the day, before the last meal of the day, and 2 h after each meal. Insulin doses were adjusted aiming for identical glucose targets (fasting glucose <5·3 mmol/L [95 mg/dL], 2-h postprandial glucose <6·7 mmol/L [120 mg/dL]). Study visits were done monthly and patients were seen every 1-4 weeks as was needed for standard clinical care. At study visits blood pressure and bodyweight were measured; patients were asked about tolerance to their pills, any hospitalisations, insulin doses, and severe hypoglycaemia events; and glucometer readings were downloaded to the central coordinating centre. Participants, caregivers, and outcome assessors were masked to the intervention. The primary outcome was a composite of fetal and neonatal outcomes, for which we calculated the relative risk and 95% CI between groups, stratifying by site and BMI using a log-binomial regression model with an intention-to-treat analysis. Secondary outcomes included several relevant maternal and neonatal outcomes. The trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01353391.Between May 25, 2011, and Oct 11, 2018, we randomly assigned 502 women, 253 (50%) to metformin and 249 (50%) to placebo. Complete data were available for 233 (92%) participants in the metformin group and 240 (96%) in the placebo group for the primary outcome. We found no significant difference in the primary composite neonatal outcome between the two groups (40% vs 40%; p=0·86; relative risk [RR] 1·02 [0·83 to 1·26]). Compared with women in the placebo group, metformin-treated women achieved better glycaemic control (HbA1c at 34 weeks' gestation 41·0 mmol/mol [SD 8·5] vs 43·2 mmol/mol [-10]; 5·90% vs 6·10%; p=0·015; mean glucose 6·05 [0·93] vs 6·27 [0·90]; difference -0·2 [-0·4 to 0·0]), required less insulin (1·1 units per kg per day vs 1·5 units per kg per day; difference -0·4 [95% CI -0·5 to -0·2]; p<0·0001), gained less weight (7·2 kg vs 9·0 kg; difference -1·8 [-2·7 to -0·9]; p<0·0001) and had fewer caesarean births (125 [53%] of 234 in the metformin group vs 148 [63%] of 236 in the placebo group; relative risk [RR] 0·85 [95% CI 0·73 to 0·99]; p=0·031). We found no significant difference between the groups in hypertensive disorders (55 [23%] in the metformin group vs 56 [23%] in the placebo group; p=0·93; RR 0·99 [0·72 to 1·35]). Compared with those in the placebo group, metformin-exposed infants weighed less (mean birthweight 3156 g [SD 742] vs 3375 g [742]; difference -218 [-353 to -82]; p=0·002), fewer were above the 97th centile for birthweight (20 [9%] in the metformin group vs 34 [15%] in the placebo group; RR 0·58 [0·34 to 0·97]; p=0·041), fewer weighed 4000 g or more at birth (28 [12%] in the metformin group vs 44 [19%] in the placebo group; RR 0·65 [0·43 to 0·99]; p=0·046), and metformin-exposed infants had reduced adiposity measures (mean sum of skinfolds 16·0 mm [SD 5·0] vs 17·4 [6·2] mm; difference -1·41 [-2·6 to -0·2]; p=0·024; mean neonatal fat mass 13·2 [SD 6·2] vs 14·6 [5·0]; p=0·017). 30 (13%) infants in the metformin group and 15 (7%) in the placebo group were small for gestational age (RR 1·96 [1·10 to 3·64]; p=0·026). We found no significant difference in the cord c-peptide between groups (673 pmol/L [435] in the metformin group vs 758 pmol/L [595] in the placebo group; p=0·10; ratio of means 0·88 [0·72 to 1·02]). The most common adverse event reported was gastrointestinal (38 events in the metformin group and 38 events in the placebo group).We found several maternal glycaemic and neonatal adiposity benefits in the metformin group. Along with reduced maternal weight gain and insulin dosage and improved glycaemic control, the lower adiposity and infant size measurements resulted in fewer large infants but a higher proportion of small-for-gestational-age infants. Understanding the implications of these effects on infants will be important to properly advise patients who are contemplating the use of metformin during pregnancy.Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, University of Toronto.