| Literature DB >> 29181414 |
E Cosson1,2, L Carbillon3, P Valensi1.
Abstract
Fasting plasma glucose (FPG) is nowadays routinely measured during early pregnancy to detect preexisting diabetes (FPG ≥ 7 mmol/L). This screening has concomitantly led to identify early intermediate hyperglycemia, defined as FPG in the 5.1 to 6.9 mmol/L range, also early gestational diabetes mellitus (eGDM). Early FPG has been associated with poor pregnancy outcomes, but the recommendation by the IADPSG to refer women with eGDM for immediate management is more pragmatic than evidence based. Although eGDM is characterized by insulin resistance and associated with classical risk factors for type 2 diabetes and incident diabetes after delivery, it is not necessarily associated with preexisting prediabetes. FPG ≥ 5.1 mmol/L in early pregnancy is actually poorly predictive of gestational diabetes mellitus diagnosed after 24 weeks of gestation. An alternative threshold should be determined but may vary according to ethnicity, gestational age, and body mass index. Finally, observational data suggest that early management of intermediate hyperglycemia may improve prognosis, through reduced gestational weight gain and potential early introduction of hypoglycemic agents. Considering all these issues, we suggest an algorithm for the management of eGDM based on early FPG levels that would be measured in case of risk factors. Nevertheless, interventional randomized trials are still missing.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29181414 PMCID: PMC5664285 DOI: 10.1155/2017/8921712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Res Impact factor: 4.011
Figure 1Risk factors for early gestational diabetes mellitus. GDM: gestational diabetes mellitus. ∗ identifies references where early GDM is defined according to the IADPSG definition, that is, fasting plasma glucose value ≥ 5.1 mmol/L.
Figure 2Does eGDM mean preexisting prediabetes? The hypothesis is when hyperglycemia has been present (but unknown) before pregnancy, then fasting plasma glucose (FPG) is already increased during early pregnancy while insulin resistance increases after 24 weeks of gestation (WG). Accordingly, oral glucose tolerance will reveal dysglycemia in early postpartum. 1h-PG and 2h-PG: plasma glucose 1 and 2 hours after 75 g oral glucose tolerance test; FPG: fasting plasma glucose; WG: weeks of gestation.
Figure 3Proposals for a management algorithm according to the presence of risk factors and screening for dysglycemia during pregnancy. DIP: diabetes in pregnancy; FPG: fasting plasma glucose; GDM: gestational diabetes mellitus.
Data considering prognosis of early fasting plasma glucose, of early gestational diabetes mellitus, and of strategies including early screening for gestational diabetes mellitus or not.
| Reference |
| Population | Screening methods for glycemic disorders | Predictive factors of eGDM | Care and differences during pregnancy (eGDM versus remaining) | Prognosis of eGDM (∗adjusted) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Riskin-Mashiah et al., 2009 [ | 6129 women | Retrospective | FPG measurement at 9.5 (7.6–11.6) GW classified in 7 HAPO categories | NA | NA | Late GDM development ↑∗ |
| Liu et al., 2014 [ | 2284 women | Retrospective | FPG at first antenatal visit (17.4 ± 4.6 GW) | NA | NA | Late GDM development ↑∗ |
|
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| Bartha et al., 2000 [ | 50 eGDM | Retrospective | Women with risk factors | Age ↑ | GWG ↓ | Total preeclampsia ↑ |
| Hawkins et al., 2008 [ | 339 eGDM (<24 WG) | Retrospective | Diet-treated GDM | Age ↑ | DIET ONLY (insulin-treated women were excluded) | Preeclampsia ↑∗ |
| Seshiah et al., 2008 [ | 120 NGT | Retrospective | Women with family history of diabetes and bad obstetric history | FPG, 2 h PG, and HbA1c are the highest in women with GDM < 12 GW | Unknown | Birth weight GDM < 12 GW lower than birth weight GDM > 30 GW |
| Easmin et al., 2015 [ | 60 eGDM (<24 WG) | Prospective observational | Unknown | BMI ↑ | Insulin therapy ↑ | Preeclampsia ↑ |
| Boriboonhirunsarn and Kasempipatchai, 2015 [ | 142 women with eGDM (<20 GW) | Thailand | Women with risk factors | Age ↑ | GWG↓ | Term, preeclampsia, cesarean delivery, macrosomia, hyperbilirubinemia = |
| Sweeting et al., 2016 [ | 3493 GDM ≥ 24 GW | Retrospective | Early screening only in women with risk factors | Age ↑ | GWG↓ | Gradient in 4 groups |
| Regnault et al., 2016 [ | 18,299 women with eGDM (<22 GW) | From the 788,494 women who delivered in France in 2013 | Early and regular screening in case of risk factors | No data | Insulin therapy ↑ | Cesarean delivery ↑ |
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| Alunni et al., 2015 [ | First period: 147 women with GDM after 24 GW | From 2652 women who delivered between 2010 and 2012 | First period: O'Sullivan and 100 g OGTT after 24 GW | BMI ↓ | Comparison between first and second periods | Term = |
| Hong et al., 2016 [ | 112 women screened early (including 85 with early GDM and 27 with regular GDM) | 569 women with risk factors for GDM | Early screening only in case of risk factors | Early screening strategy | Insulin therapy ↑ | Early screening strategy |
2h-PG: 2-hour plasma glucose; ADIPS: Australasian Diabetes in Pregnancy Society; BMI: body mass index; eGDM: early gestational diabetes mellitus; GDM: gestational diabetes mellitus; GWG: gestational weight gain; HAPO: hyperglycemia and adverse pregnancy outcome; LGA: large for gestational age; NA: nonapplicable; NICU: neonatal intensive care unit; OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test; SGA: small for gestational age; WG: weeks of gestation; =: similar; ↓: decreased or lower; ↑: increased or higher. ∗References where multivariate analyses were performed.