OBJECTIVE: To compare glycaemic control and pregnancy outcome in women with type 1 diabetes treated with the long-acting insulin analogues detemir or glargine. METHODS: Retrospective study of singleton pregnancies from 2007 to 2011 in women with type 1 diabetes with a single living fetus at 22 weeks using either insulin detemir (n = 67) or glargine (n = 46) from conception. RESULTS: Baseline characteristics were similar in the detemir and glargine groups. Haemoglobin A1c was comparable at 8 weeks (median 6.6% (range 5.6-9.8) vs. 6.8% (5.4-10.1), p = 0.15) and at 33 weeks (6.1% (5.1-7.6) vs. 6.2% (4.8-7.2), p = 0.38). The incidence of severe hypoglycaemia was comparable (15 (23%) vs. 10 (23%), p = 0.98). Pre-eclampsia occurred in 9 (14%) vs. 8 (18%), p = 0.52, pre-term delivery in 21 (31%) vs. 16 (35%), (p = 0.70) and 33 (49%) vs. 14 (30%) infants were large for gestational age (p = 0.046). No perinatal deaths were observed. One offspring in each group was born with a major congenital malformation. CONCLUSIONS: Glycaemic control and pregnancy outcome were comparable in women using insulin detemir or glargine, except for a lower prevalence of large for gestational age infants in women on glargine. The use of both long-acting insulin analogues during pregnancy seems safe.
OBJECTIVE: To compare glycaemic control and pregnancy outcome in women with type 1 diabetes treated with the long-acting insulin analogues detemir or glargine. METHODS: Retrospective study of singleton pregnancies from 2007 to 2011 in women with type 1 diabetes with a single living fetus at 22 weeks using either insulin detemir (n = 67) or glargine (n = 46) from conception. RESULTS: Baseline characteristics were similar in the detemir and glargine groups. Haemoglobin A1c was comparable at 8 weeks (median 6.6% (range 5.6-9.8) vs. 6.8% (5.4-10.1), p = 0.15) and at 33 weeks (6.1% (5.1-7.6) vs. 6.2% (4.8-7.2), p = 0.38). The incidence of severe hypoglycaemia was comparable (15 (23%) vs. 10 (23%), p = 0.98). Pre-eclampsia occurred in 9 (14%) vs. 8 (18%), p = 0.52, pre-term delivery in 21 (31%) vs. 16 (35%), (p = 0.70) and 33 (49%) vs. 14 (30%) infants were large for gestational age (p = 0.046). No perinatal deaths were observed. One offspring in each group was born with a major congenital malformation. CONCLUSIONS: Glycaemic control and pregnancy outcome were comparable in women using insulin detemir or glargine, except for a lower prevalence of large for gestational age infants in women on glargine. The use of both long-acting insulin analogues during pregnancy seems safe.
Authors: Elisabeth R Mathiesen; Norsiah Ali; Amra C Alibegovic; Eleni Anastasiou; Katarzyna Cypryk; Harold de Valk; Jorge Dores; Fidelma Dunne; Mari-Anne Gall; Santiago Duran Garcia; Hélène P Hanaire; Lise Lotte N Husemoen; Marina Ivanišević; Hans-Peter Kempe; David R McCance; Peter Damm Journal: Diabetes Care Date: 2021-07-30 Impact factor: 19.112