Regression From Early GDM to Normal Glucose Tolerance and Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes in the Treatment of Booking Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Study

Date

Authors

Simmons, David
Immanuel, Jincy
Hague, William M.
Teede, Helena
Nolan, Christopher J.
Peek, Michael J.
Flack, Jeff R.
McLean, Mark
Wong, Vincent W.
Hibbert, Emily J.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Access Statement

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To compare pregnancy outcomes among women with a normal oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) before 20 weeks’ gestation (early) and at 24–28 weeks’ gestation (late) (no gestational diabetes mellitus, or No-GDM), those with early GDM randomized to observation with a subsequent normal OGTT (GDM-Regression), and those with GDM on both occasions (GDM-Maintained). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Women at <20 weeks’ gestation with GDM risk factors who were recruited for a randomized controlled early GDM treatment trial were included. Women with treated early GDM and late GDM (according to the World Health Organization’s 2013 criteria) were excluded from this analysis. Logistic regression compared pregnancy outcomes. RESULTS GDM-Regression (n = 121) group risk factor profiles and OGTT results generally fell between the No-GDM (n = 2,218) and GDM-Maintained (n = 254) groups, with adjusted incidences of pregnancy complications similar between the GDM-Regression and No-GDM groups. CONCLUSIONS Women with early GDM but normal OGTT at 24–28 weeks’ gestation had pregnancy outcomes that were similar to those of individuals without GDM. Identify-ing early GDM likely to regress would allow treatment to be avoided.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Diabetes Care

Book Title

Entity type

Publication

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until