Currently there are no UK guidelines regarding safe weight gain in pregnancy. Obesity (BMI ⩾ 30 kg/m2) and excessive weight gain in pregnancy are associated with serious health risks to both mother and baby including gestational diabetes, macrosomia, pre-eclampsia, caesarean section and post operative complicationsReference Galtier-Dereure, Boegner and Bringer 1 . In the absence of UK guidance, USA recommendations are often referred to which suggest that women with a pre-pregnancy BMI >29·9 kg/m2 should limit gestational weight gain (GWG) to 5–9 kg 2 . The aim of this study was to explore patterns of GWG in obese pregnancies in comparison to USA IOM recommendations. Women with BMI >29·9 kg/m2 were recruited from antenatal clinic at booking-in appointments and agreed to being weighed at each trimester of pregnancy. Weight change was calculated and then compared with categorised pregnancy weight gain (<0 kg, 0–5 kg, 5–9 kg and >9 kg). Between June 2009 and June 2010, 824 women consented to participate and weight data were collected for 756 women (table 1).
Missing weight data made statistical analysis difficult but results suggest that increasing booking-in BMI was associated with deceased risk of excessive weight gain (>9 kg). In a model to assess predictors of GWG a higher booking BMI was negatively associated with GWG (β −0·25, 95 % CI −0·32 to −0·19, p < 0·001). Due to finite resources, only women with a booking-in BMI ⩾ 40 kg/m2 are currently offered specialist obesity care at the study hospital, despite NICE 3 recommending specialist care for BMI ⩾ 30 kg/m2. These results suggest that pregnant women with BMI 30–39·9 kg/m2 may be at greater risk of excessive GWG and yet are only offered routine antenatal care. A review of ante natal care provision for overweight pregnancies is urgently needed.