| Literature DB >> 24892280 |
Shelley Macaulay1, David B Dunger2, Shane A Norris2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is any degree of impaired glucose tolerance first recognised during pregnancy. Most women with GDM revert to normal glucose metabolism after delivery of their babies; however, they are at risk of developing type 2 diabetes later in life as are their offspring. Determining a country's GDM prevalence can assist with policy guidelines regarding GDM screening and management, and can highlight areas requiring research. This systematic review assesses GDM prevalence in Africa. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24892280 PMCID: PMC4043667 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0097871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The different diagnostic criteria available for the diagnosis of gestational diabetes mellitus.
| Group/Organisation | Screening test | Diagnostic criteria: blood glucose level thresholds |
| American Diabetes Association | One step: 2 hr 75 g OGTT | At least one of the following must be met: |
| Fasting: ≥5.1 mmol/l (92 mg/dl) | ||
| 1 hr: ≥10.0 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) | ||
| 2 hr: ≥8.5 mmol/l (153 mg/dl) | ||
| OR Two step: | OR | |
| 1) 1 hr 50 g (non-fasting) screen | If 1 hr: ≥10.0 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) proceed with step 2 | |
| 2) 3 hr 100 g OGTT | 3 hr: ≥7.8 mmol/l (140 mg/dl) | |
| Carpenter and Coustan | 3 hr 100 g OGTT | At least two of the following must be met: |
| Fasting: ≥5.3 mmol/l (95.4 mg/dl) | ||
| 1 hr: ≥10.0 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) | ||
| 2 hr: ≥8.6 mmol/l (154.8 mg/dl) | ||
| 3 hr: ≥7.8 mmol/l (140 mg/dl) | ||
| Diabetes Pregnancy Study Group (DPSG) of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | Fasting: >5.2 mmol/l (93.6 mg/dl) |
| OR | ||
| 2 hr: >9.0 mmol/l (162 mg/dl) | ||
| International Association of Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups (IADPSG) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | At least one of the following must be met: |
| Fasting: ≥5.1 mmol/l (92 mg/dl) | ||
| 1 hr: ≥10.0 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) | ||
| 2 hr: ≥8.5 mmol/l (153 mg/dl) | ||
| National Diabetes Data Group (NDDG) (1979) | 3 hr 100 g OGTT | At least two of the following must be met: |
| Fasting: ≥5.8 mmol/l (105 mg/dl) | ||
| 1 hr: ≥10.6 mmol/l (190 mg/dl) | ||
| 2 hr: ≥9.2 mmol/l (165 mg/dl) | ||
| 3 hr: ≥8.0 mmol/l (145 mg/dl) | ||
| World Health Organization (1985) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | Fasting: ≥7.8 mmol/l (140 mg/dl) |
| OR | ||
| 2 hr: ≥7.8 mmol/l (140 mg/dl) | ||
| World Health Organization (1999) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | Fasting: ≥7.0 mmol/l (126 mg/dl) |
| OR | ||
| 2 hr: ≥7.8 mmol/l (140 mg/dl) | ||
| World Health Organization (2013) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | At least one of the following must be met: |
| Fasting: 5.1–6.9 mmol/l (92–125 mg/dl) | ||
| 1 hr: ≥10.0 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) | ||
| 2 hr: 8.5–11.0 mmol/l (153–199 mg/dl) |
Figure 1Flow diagram illustrating the number of included and excluded studies in the systematic review on gestational diabetes mellitus in Africa.
Reporting quality and risk of bias assessments.
| Author | STROBE reporting quality score | Overall risk of bias |
| Seyoum et al., 1999 | 18/22 | Low |
| Bouhsain et al., 2009 | 16/22 | High |
| Challis et al., 2002 | 11/22 | Moderate |
| Olarinoye et al., 2004 | 18/22 | Low |
| Adegbola & Ajayi, 2008 | 17/22 | Moderate |
| Kamanu et al., 2009 | 19/22 | High |
| Kuti et al., 2012 | 19/22 | Moderate |
| Anzaku & Musa, 2013 | 17/22 | Low |
| Ozumba et al., 2004 | 12/22 | High |
| Jackson & Coetzee, 1979 | 15/22 | Moderate |
| Ranchod et al., 1991 | 16/22 | Low |
| Mamabolo et al., 2006 | 18/22 | Moderate |
| Basu et al., 2010 | 19/22 | High |
| Swai et al., 1991 | Not assessed | Not assessed |
*Good/fair quality papers were categorised as having a score of ≥14/22, poor quality papers were classified as having a score of <14/22.
As only the abstract was available an assessment of the reporting quality and risk of bias could not be performed.
Prevalence of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) in Africa.
| Author | Country | Region(rural/urban) | Populationgroup | Samplesize | Age of women | Gestational age when tested for GDM | GDM diagnosticcriteria used | Diagnostic test used to determine GDM | GDM prevalence |
| Seyoum et al., 1999 | Ethiopia | Tigray (rural) | Black | 890 | 27.4±7.1yrs(15–50 yrs) | 24+ weeks | WHO criteria (1985) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 3.7% (33/890) |
| Bouhsain et al., 2009 | Morocco | De Rabat (urban) | Not stated | 426 | 28.8±6.1 yrs | 24–28 weeks | Carpenter and Coustan’s criteria | 3 hr 100 g OGTT | 7.7% (8/426) |
| Challis et al.,2002 | Mozam-bique | Maputo (urban/suburban) | Not stated (assumed Black) | Cases: 109(women withlate fetal deaths) | Mean of 25 yrs | >27 weeks | Fasting blood glucose of ≥6.7 mmol/l (120.6 mg/dl) and/or OGTT 2 hr blood glucose of ≥9.0 mmol/l (162 mg/dl) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 11% (12/109 cases) |
| Controls: 110(women withlive births) | Post delivery | 7.3% (8/110 controls) | |||||||
| Olarinoye et al., 2004 | Nigeria | Lagos (urban) | Black | 248 (138; 75 gOGTT, 110; 100 g OGTT) | 30.7±4.2 yrs(18–41 yrs) | ≥28 weeks | WHO criteria (1985) | 3 hr 75 g OGTT | 11.6% (16/138) −75 g OGTT |
| NDDG criteria (1979) | 3 hr 100 g OGTT | 4.5% (5/110)- 100 g OGTT | |||||||
| Adegbola & Ajayi,2008 | Nigeria | Lagos (urban) | Black | Cases: 113women with risk factors | 19–45 yrs | 24–28 weeks and repeated at 30–32 weeks | Carpenter and Coustan’s criteria | 3 hr 100 g OGTT | 6.2% (7/113 cases) |
| Controls: 109 womenwithout risk factors | 4.6% (5/109 controls) | ||||||||
| Kamanu et al., 2009 | Nigeria | Aba (urban) | Black | Cases: 240womenwith macrosomic babies | 19–45 yrs | 24–28 weeks | 1 hr 50 g OGTT >7.8 mmol/l (140 mg/dl). | 1 hr 50 g OGTT | 2.5% (6/240 cases) |
| Borderline results: 2 hr 75 g OGTT plasma glucose level >10 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) at 1 hr and >8.6 mmol/l (154.8 mg/dl) at 2 hr | Borderline cases followed up with a 2 hr 75 g OGTT | ||||||||
| Controls: 8800 womenwith normalweight babies | 1.5% (134/8800 controls) | ||||||||
| Kuti et al., 2012 | Nigeria | Ibadan (urban) | Black | 765 | 19–45 yrs | 4–40 weeks | WHO criteria (1999) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 13.9% (106/765) (amongst women with risk factors) |
| Anzaku & Musa, 2013 | Nigeria | Jos (urban) | Black | 253 | 19–42 yrs | 24–28 weeks | WHO criteria (1985) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 8.3% (21/253) |
| Ozumba et al., 2004 | Nigeria | Enugu (urban) | Black | 12030 | 15–54 yrs | ≥28 weeks | WHO criteria (1999) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 1% (122/12030) |
| Jackson & Coetzee, 1979 | South Africa | Cape Town (urban) | Not stated | 558 | Not stated | All gestations (test repeated in 3rd trimester) | When 2 of the following 3 criteria were exceeded on 2 separate GTT: | 2 hr 50 g OGTT | 3% (17/558) (amongst women with risk factors) |
| 2) Maximum level: 10.0 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) (excluding the 30 min figure) | |||||||||
| 3)2 hr level: 6.7 mmol/l(120.6 mg/dl) | |||||||||
| Ranchod et al., 1991 | South Africa | Pieter-martizburg (urban) | Indian (majority) and Coloured (minority) | 1717 | Not stated | 28–32 weeks | WHO criteria (1985) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 3.8% (65/1717): WHO |
| 1.6% (27/1717): DPSG of EASD | |||||||||
| Mamabolo et al., 2006 | South Africa | Limpopo (rural) | Black | 262 | 25.5±6.9 yrs | 28–36 weeks | WHO criteria (1999) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 8.8% (23/262) |
| Basu et al., 2010 | South Africa | Johannesburg (urban) | Black (94%), White (4%), Mixed (1.7%) and Asian (0.5%) | 767 | 13–31 yrs | 23–32 weeks | Institutional protocol: Fasting blood glucose: >8.0 mmol/l (180 mg/dl) or random blood glucose: 11.0 mmol/l (198 mg/dl) | Fasting or random blood glucose levels | 1.8% (14/767) |
| Swai et al., 1991 | Tanzania | Unknown (rural) | Black | 189 | Unavailable | Unavailable | WHO criteria (1985) | 2 hr 75 g OGTT | 0% (0/189) |
*Refer to Table 1;
**Could not obtain full text article.