| Literature DB >> 34262311 |
Caro Minschart1, Kaat Beunen1, Katrien Benhalima1,2.
Abstract
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a frequent medical complication during pregnancy. Screening and diagnostic practices for GDM are inconsistent across the world. This narrative review includes data from 87 observational studies and randomized controlled trials (RCTs), and aims to give an overview of the current evidence on screening strategies and diagnostic criteria for GDM. Screening in early pregnancy remains controversial and studies show conflicting results on the benefit of screening and treatment of GDM in early pregnancy. Implementing the one-step "International Association of Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups" (IADPSG) screening strategy at 24-28 weeks often leads to a substantial increase in the prevalence of GDM, without conclusive evidence regarding the benefits on pregnancy outcomes compared to a two-step screening strategy with a glucose challenge test (GCT). In addition, RCTs are needed to investigate the impact of treatment of GDM diagnosed with IADPSG criteria on long-term maternal and childhood outcomes. Selective screening using a risk-factor-based approach could be helpful in simplifying the screening algorithm but carries the risk of missing significant proportions of GDM cases. A two-step screening method with a 50g GCT and subsequently a 75g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) with IADPSG could be an alternative to reduce the need for an OGTT. However, to have an acceptable sensitivity to screen for GDM with the IADPSG criteria, the threshold of the GCT should be lowered from 7.8 to 7.2 mmol/L. A pragmatic approach to screen for GDM can be implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic, using fasting plasma glucose (FPG), HbA1c or even random plasma glucose (RPG) to reduce the number of OGTTs needed. However, usual guidelines and care should be resumed as soon as the COVID pandemic is controlled.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; gestational diabetes mellitus; pregnancy; screening
Year: 2021 PMID: 34262311 PMCID: PMC8273744 DOI: 10.2147/DMSO.S287121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes ISSN: 1178-7007 Impact factor: 3.168
Figure 1The literature search and selection process.
Screening for GDM in Early Pregnancy
| Author, Year/Country (Ref.) | Design | Subjects (N) | Study Population | Timeframe Early Testing (Weeks) | GDM Diagnosis Criteria | Comparison | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bartha, 2002/Spain | Retrospective cohort study | 424 | Women with GDM | First antenatal visit (early) | 50g GCT followed by, if abnormal, a 3h 100g OGTT/GDM diagnosis if ≥2 values abnormal (≥.5.8, 10.6, 9.2, 8.1 mmol/L) | Earlier vs later (24–28 weeks) screening | Early glucose intolerance screening with a GCT could avoid diabetes-related complications in women diagnosed with GDM |
| Riskin, 2009/Israel | Retrospective study | 6129 | Singleton pregnancies >24 weeks in mothers without ODIP or FTFPG ≥5.8 mmol/L | <13 weeks | 50g GCT followed by, if abnormal, 3h 100g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/CC criteria and GCT ≥11.1 mmol/L | FPG categories (<4.2, 4.2–4.4, 4.5–4.7, 4.8–5.0, 5.1–5.2, 5.3–5.5 and 5.6–5.8 mmol/L) | Higher FTFPG in early pregnancy increased the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes |
| van Leeuwen, 2010/the Netherlands | Prospective cohort study | 995 | Singleton pregnancies in women without ODIP <20 weeks | <20 weeks | 50g GCT and RPG at 24–28 weeks followed by 2h 75g OGTT if RPG ≥6.8 mmol/L or 1h ≥7.8 mmol/L/WHO 1999 criteria | 50g GCT vs RPG | Use of a clinical prediction model is an accurate method to identify women at increased risk for GDM, and could be used to select women for additional testing for GDM |
| Teede, 2011/Australia | Retrospective study | 4276 | Singleton pregnancies | 12–15 weeks | Two-step method: GCT followed by, if abnormal, a 2h 75g OGTT at 28 weeks/ADIPS criteria | Derivation (used to develop a simple predictor scoring tool that specified GDM risk based on identified clinical risk factors) vs validation group | The risk prediction tool, derived from risk factors in early pregnancy, enables simple identification of women at an increased risk of developing GDM |
| Zhu, 2013/China | Retrospective cohort study | 14,039 | All pregnant women without ODIP | First antenatal visit (<24 weeks) | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/ MOH China criteria (fasting, ≥5.10 mmol/L; 1 h, ≥10.00 mmol/L; and 2 h, ≥8.50 mmol/L) | 6 FPG groups (<4.1, 4.1–4.59, 4.60–5.09, 5.10–5.59, 5.6–6.09, 6.10–6.99 mmol/L) | Only 30.3% of women who had a FPG of ≥5.1 mmol/L still had a FPG of ≥5.1 mmol/L at 24–28 weeks |
| Alunni, 2015/US | Retrospective cohort study | 2652 | Singleton pregnancies in women without ODIP | ≤24 weeks | Early screening: (1) HbA1c 5.7–6.4% or FPG 5.1–6.9 mmol/L at ≤24 weeks, (2) one abnormal value on a 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks if normal early screening Standard approach: 1h 50g GCT followed by a 3h 100g OGTT/CC Criteria | Early screening vs standard two-step ACOG approach | Implementing early screening for GDM gave no significant difference in neonatal outcomes |
| Hong, 2016/US | Retrospective cohort study | 569 | Singleton GDM pregnancies with ≥1 indication for early screening (GDM or macrosomia in a prior pregnancy or obesity) | <20 weeks | 1h 50g GCT followed by a 3h 100g OGTT if the former was ≥7.5 mmol/L/CC criteria | Early (<20 weeks) vs routine (>24 weeks) screening | Early GDM screening was not associated with a decreased risk of adverse perinatal outcomes |
| Sweeting, 2017/Australia | Retrospective cohort study | 3098 | High risk women | <24 weeks | Universal testing at 24–28 weeks with 2h 75g OGTT or 50g GCT and, if positive, a subsequent OGTT/ADIPS criteria | Early GDM (<24 weeks) vs standard GDM (≥24 weeks) | HbA1c >5.9% early in pregnancy identified an increased risk of LGA, macrosomia, C-section, and hypertensive disorders in standard GDM |
| Mañe, 2017/Spain | Prospective multi-ethnic cohort study | 1228 | Singleton pregnancies in women without ODIP | First trimester | Two-step approach: 50g GCT followed by, if abnormal, a 3h 100g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/NDDG criteria | HbA1c ≥5.9% vs 5.9–6.4% | Early HbA1c ≥5.9% identified women at high risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes independently of GDM diagnosis later in pregnancy |
| Benaiges, 2017/Spain | Retrospective analysis of a non-randomized prospective cohort | 1158 | Women with a singleton pregnancy without ODIP | <12 weeks | Two-step method: 50g GCT followed by a 3h 100g OGTT if the former was positive/NDDG criteria | First trimester HbA1c of <4.8% vs 4.8–5.5% vs ≥5.6% | HbA1c in early pregnancy lacks sensitivity/specificity for use as diagnostic test, but could be useful in simplifying the diagnostic algorithm for GDM |
| Hosseini, 2018/Iran | Prospective population-based cohort study | 929 | Singleton pregnancies | 6–14 weeks | Universal screening with FPG for ODIP and early GDM at 6–14 weeks. 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | Normal pregnancy vs early-onset GDM (6–14 weeks) vs late-onset GDM (24–28 weeks) | Early-onset GDM was associated with poorer pregnancy outcomes |
| Ryan, 2018/UK | Retrospective clinical audit of a prospectively maintained database | 576 | High risk singleton pregnancies | 11–13 weeks | FPG/ 2h 75g OGTT/SIGN 2010 thresholds | Routine vs early screening | Early screening improved the pregnancy outcomes, such as emergency C-section, macrosomia and neonatal hypoglycemia |
| Bianchi, 2019/Italy | Retrospective study | 290 | High risk women | 16–18 weeks | 2h 75g OGTT (and FPG)/IADPSG criteria | Early (16–18 weeks) vs standard (24–28 weeks) screening | Similar short-term maternal-fetal outcomes in both groups |
| Boe, 2019/US | Retrospective cohort study | 4144 | Women without multiple gestations and second deliveries | First antenatal visit (<24 weeks) | HbA1c and/or 3h 100g OGTT/HbA1c ≥ 6.5% (ODIP) vs 5.9–6.4% vs <5.9% and CC criteria | Early HbA1c vs CC testing | Early HbA1c as an isolated test could not replace routine CC testing for GDM because of poor sensitivity |
| Punnose, 2020/India | Retrospective cohort study | 2275 | Singleton pregnancies in women without ODIP | First trimester (before 13 6/7 weeks) | One-step 2h 75g OGTT at <24 weeks (in case of risk factors) or at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | HbA1c <5.2% vs 5.2–5.5% vs ≥5.6% | Early HbA1c is an independent GDM predictor in Asian Indian women but lacks sensitivity and specificity for use as a diagnostic test |
| Benhalima, 2020/Belgium | Multi-centric prospective cohort study | 1843 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP and history of bariatric surgery | 6–14 weeks | Non-fasting GCT and 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | Accuracy of the developed prediction model using clinical and biochemical risk factors in early pregnancy vs two validated models (van Leeuwen and Teede) | This prediction model for GDM had a moderate accuracy and could identify women at risk for GDM before or in early pregnancy |
| Cosson, 2020/France | Retrospective study | 523 | Women with singleton pregnancy and without ODIP and bariatric surgery | <22 weeks | FPG or 2h 75g OGTT/ IADPSG criteria | Immediate care vs no immediate care for early fasting hyperglycemia | Treating women with early fasting hyperglycemia, especially when FPG is ≥5.5 mmol/L, may improve pregnancy outcomes |
| Liu, 2020/China | Prospective cohort study | 522 | Singleton pregnancies | 18–20 weeks | 2h 75g OGTT/IADPSG-2015 guidelines | 4 groups: NGT (no GDM diagnosis), EGDM (GDM in only early OGTT), LGDM (GDM in only standard OGTT) and GDM (GDM diagnosis in both OGTTs) | Early GDM diagnosis at 18–20 weeks is associated with adverse outcomes |
| Benhalima, 2021/Belgium | Multi-centric prospective cohort study | 2006 | Singleton Pregnancies without ODIP and history of bariatric surgery | 6–14 weeks | Non-fasting GCT and a 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | FPG ≥5.1–5.5 mmol/L in early pregnancy vs FPG <5.1 mmol/L in early pregnancy | Group with increased FPG in early pregnancy had significantly more NICU admissions |
| Osmundson, 2016/US | RCT | 83 | Women with singleton pregnancy without ODIP, with HbA1c 5.7–6.4% | <14.0 weeks | 2h 75-g OGTT at 26–28 weeks/IADPSG and California Sweet Success Guidelines | Usual care vs early treatment for GDM with diet, BG monitoring, and insulin as needed | Early treatment did not significantly reduce the risk of GDM except in non-obese women |
| Hughes, 2018 (ongoing)/New Zealand | RCT | 47 | Women with singleton pregnancy without ODIP, with HbA1c ≥5.9–6.4% | <14.0 weeks | 2h 75h OGTT/New-Zealand criteria | Standard care vs early intervention in pregnancies complicated by prediabetes | First results expected in 2021 |
| Simmons, 2018 (ToBOGM pilot study)/Australia | RCT | 79 | High risk women with singleton pregnancy | <20.0 weeks (4–19.6 weeks) | 2h 75g OGTT/IADPSG criteria | Women with booking GDM receiving immediate (clinical referral or ongoing treatment) vs deferred (no) treatment vs women without booking GDM (‘decoys’) | More NICU admission in the early GDM group with a tendency for more SGA but less LGA |
| Simmons, 2018 (ToBOGM study protocol)/International | RCT | 4000 | High-risk women with singleton pregnancy | <20.0 weeks (4–19.6 weeks) | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/2014 ADIPS criteria | Intervention (immediate treatment) vs control (no treatment) vs decoys (NGT but undergo all procedures) vs non-active (NGT and records reviewed postnatal) | First results expected mid-2021 |
| Vinter, 2018/Denmark | RCT | 90 | Obese pregnant women (BMI 30–45 kg/m2) with singleton pregnancy | 12–15 weeks | 2h 75g OGTT/IADPSG Criteria | Lifestyle intervention vs standard care | Lifestyle intervention was not effective in improving obstetric or metabolic outcomes |
| Roeder, 2019/US | RCT | 157 | Women with hyperglycemia (HbA1c 5.7–6.4% and/or FPG 5.1–6.9 mmol/L) and a singleton pregnancy without ODIP | ≤15.0 weeks | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | Early pregnancy vs 3rd trimester treatment of hyperglycemia | Treatment in early pregnancy did not improve maternal or neonatal outcomes significantly |
| Harper, 2020/US | RCT | 922 | Obese women (BMI ≥30 kg/m2) without ODIP and history of bariatric surgery | 14–20 weeks | Two-step method: 1h 50g GCT followed by a 3h 100g OGTT/CC criteria | Early GDM screening (14–20 weeks) vs routine screening (24–28 weeks) | Early GDM screening in obese women did not reduce the composite perinatal outcomes, such as macrosomia, C-section and shoulder dystocia |
| NCT03523143 (TESGO study) (ongoing)/Taiwan | RCT | 2068 | Singleton pregnancy without ODIP | 18–20 weeks | 2h 75g OGTT/IADPSG criteria | Early screening group (18–20 weeks) vs standard screening group (24–28 weeks) | Results expected beginning of 2021 |
Abbreviations: GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; GCT, glucose challenge test; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; FTFPG, first trimester fasting plasma glucose; CC, Carpenter and Coustan; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; RPG, random plasma glucose; WHO, World Health Organization; ADIPS, Australasian Siabetes in Pregnancy Society; MOH, Ministry of Health; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1C; ACOG, American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; LGA, large-for-gestational age; C-section, caesarian section; NDDG, National Diabetes Data Group; ODIP, overt diabetes in pregnancy; IADPSG, International Association of the Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups; SIGN, Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network; NGT, normal glucose tolerance; EGDM, early-onset gestational diabetes; LGDM, late-onset gestational diabetes; NICU, neonatal intensive care unit; RCT, randomized controlled trial; BG, blood glucose; SGA, small-for-gestational age; BMI, body mass index; TESGO, The Effect of Early Screening and Intervention for Gestational Diabetes Mellitus on Pregnancy Outcomes.
Current Guidelines for Screening and Diagnosis of GDM
| Guideline, Year | Range | One-Step | Two-Step | OGTT Criteria | OGTT Time | Risk Factors List | Screening in Early Pregnancy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IADPSG, 2010 | Global | √ | ≥5.1 (fasting), ≥10.0 (1h) and/or ≥8.5 mmol/L (2h) | 24–28 weeks | √ | FPG ≥5.1mmol/L in early pregnancy is diagnosed as GDM | |
| WHO, 2013 | Global | √ | IADPSG | Any time | Criteria apply for the diagnosis of GDM at any time during pregnancy | ||
| FIGO, 2015 | Global | √ | IADPSG | 24–28 weeks or any other time | √ | Not applicable due to lack of clear evidence | |
| NICE, 2015 | UK | √ | ≥5.6 mmol/L (fasting) or ≥7.8 mmol/L (2h) | 24–28 weeks | √ | 75g 2h OGTT in women with previous GDM as soon as possible after booking | |
| ACOG, 2018 | US | √ | CC/NDDG | 24–28 weeks | √ | Consider testing in all women with BMI >25 kg/m2 (or >23 kg/m2 in Asian Americans) and with ≥1 additional risk factors | |
| ADA, 2021 | US | √ | √ | IADPSG/CC | 24–28 weeks | √ | OGTT for high-risk women at the first antenatal visit and classified as T1DM or T2DM |
Notes: The OGTT threshold value of IADPSG criteria is 5.1–10.0– 8.5 mmol/L for a 2h 75g OGTT. One or more of these threshold values must be equaled or exceeded for the diagnosis of GDM. The OGTT threshold value of CC criteria is 5.3–10.0–8.6–7.8 mmol/L for a 3h 100g OGTT. The OGTT threshold value of NDDG criteria is 5.8–10.6–9.2–8.0 mmol/L for a 4h 100g OGTT. For CC and NDDG criteria, a diagnosis generally requires that two or more thresholds be met or exceeded, although some clinicians choose to use just one elevated value.
Abbreviations: GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; IADPSG, International Association of Diabetic Pregnancy Study Group; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; WHO, World Health Organization; FIGO, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; ACOG, American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; CC, Carpenter and Coustan; NDDG, National Diabetes Data Group; BMI, body mass index; ADA, American Diabetes Association; T1DM, Type 1 diabetes mellitus; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus.
One-Step Screening with IADPSG Criteria versus One- or Two-Step Screening with Other Criteria
| Author, Year/Country (Ref.) | Design | Subjects (N) | Study Population | Comparison | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agarwal, 2010/UAE | Retrospective cohort study | 10,283 | All pregnant women | Impact of IADPSG criteria on GDM diagnosis compared to ADA criteria | The IADPSG criteria caused a 2.9-fold increase in GDM prevalence (37.7% of all pregnant women with IADPSG criteria vs 12.9% with ADA criteria) |
| Rajput, 2012/ India | Prospective study | 607 | Pregnant women without ODIP | HbA1c in combination with ADA vs IADPSG criteria for diagnosis of GDM | 7.1% were diagnosed as having GDM based on ADA criteria while 23.72% women were diagnosed as having GDM using IADPSG criteria |
| Benhalima, 2013/Belgium | Retrospective cohort study | 6727 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP and bariatric surgery | CC criteria (old GDM) vs IADPSG criteria (new GDM) for GDM screening | More women were identified as having GDM using the IADPSG criteria and these women carried an increased risk for adverse gestational outcome compared to women without GDM |
| Duran, 2014/ Spain | Prospective cohort study | 3276 | Pregnant women without ODIP | One-step IADPSG vs two-step ADA recommended GDM screening | Application of IADPSG screening was associated with a 3.5-fold increase in GDM prevalence as well as significant improvements in pregnancy outcomes |
| Fuller, 2014/US | Pre–post comparison study | 812 | Pregnant women without ODIP and gastric bypass | One-step (2h 75g OGTT, IADPSG criteria) vs two-step (50g GCT followed by 3h 100g OGTT and CC criteria if GCT ≥7.5 mmol/L) | Despite a 4.7% increase in GDM (from 7% to 11.7%), no differences in delivery or neonatal outcomes and no lower rates of compliance with screening were found when using one-step vs two-step screening |
| Hung, 2015/Taiwan | Before–after retrospective cohort study | 6697 | Singleton pregnancies >24 weeks without ODIP | One-step IADPSG screening (P2) vs two-step screening (50g GCT followed by 100g 3h OGTT with CC criteria if the GCT ≥7.8 mmol/L) (P1) | GDM incidence increased from 4.6% in P1 to 12.4% in P2. Adoption of the IADPSG criteria led to a significant reduction in maternal weight gain during pregnancy, birth weight, and the rates of macrosomia and LGA |
| Meek, 2015/UK | Retrospective study | 25,543 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | One-step IADPSG criteria vs one-step NICE 2015 criteria for GDM screening | The IADPSG criteria identified women at substantial risk of complications such as LGA who would not be identified by the NICE 2015 criteria |
| Feldman, 2016/ US | Before–after retrospective cohort study | 6066 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | One-step (IADPSG criteria) vs two-step GDM screening (CC criteria) | The IADPSG screening method was associated with a higher rate of GDM (27% vs 17%) but not with a reduction in LGA newborns or cesarean deliveries |
| March, 2016/ US | Retrospective cohort study | 235 | Singleton pregnancies | One-step (IADPSG) vs two-step (NDDG criteria) GDM screening | The one-step method identified women with at least equally high risk of adverse outcomes as the two-step method |
| Waters, 2016/North America | Secondary analysis of prospectively collected data | 6159 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP and fertility treatment | GDM based on CC criteria (also GDM based on IADPSG criteria) vs GDM diagnosed with IADPSG criteria but not CC criteria vs no GDM | Women diagnosed with GDM based on IADPSG criteria had higher adverse outcome frequencies compared with women without GDM |
| Huhn, 2017/Switzerland | Retrospective cohort study | 1367 allocated | Women with singleton pregnancy and without ODIP | Two-step screening with 50 g GCT and 2h 75g OGTT (period 1) vs one-step 75g OGTT with IADPSG criteria (period 2) | Introduction of the IADPSG criteria resulted in an absolute increase of GDM prevalence of 8.5% (3.3% in period 1 to 11.8% in period 2) |
| Adam, 2017/South Africa | Prospective cohort study | 554 | All pregnant women <26 weeks | IADPSG vs NICE vs WHO 1999 vs Western Cape criteria using universal or selective screening | Substantial increase in prevalence of GDM with use of the IADPSG criteria, regardless of universal or selective screening |
| Luewan, 2018/Thailand | Prospective descriptive study | 648 | Singleton pregnancies excluding those with high risk for GDM | One-step (IADPSG) vs two-step GDM screening based on preference | Prevalence of GDM was significantly higher in the one-step group (32.0% vs 10.3%) without clear evidence of better outcomes |
| Goedegebure, 2018/the Netherlands | Multicenter retrospective cohort study | 1386 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | WHO-2013 (IADPSG) vs WHO-1999 GDM criteria | Using WHO-2013 criteria resulted in earlier GDM diagnosis, less need for insulin treatment and more spontaneous deliveries, but no differences in adverse pregnancy outcomes compared to WHO-1999 criteria |
| Benhalima, 2018 (Diabetes Care)/Belgium | Multicentric prospective cohort study | 2006 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP and history of bariatric surgery | Sensitivity and specificity of the 50g GCT in a universal two-step screening strategy for GDM using IADPSG criteria vs a universal one-step screening with the 75g OGTT and IADPSG criteria | The GCT has a moderate diagnostic accuracy in a universal two-step screening strategy with IADPSG criteria; lowering the threshold for the GCT from 7.8 to 7.2 mmol/L would increase sensitivity from 60% to 72% and more than 60% of all OGTTs could be avoided |
| Pocobelli, 2018/US | Before–after cohort study | 23,257 | Singleton live birth deliveries in women without ODIP | Two-step screening with 50g GCT/FPG test followed by a 3h 100g OGTT vs one-step IADPSG screening | Adopting the one-step approach was associated with an increase in GDM diagnosis (by 41%), and in rates of labor induction and neonatal hypoglycemia, without association with other outcomes including cesarean delivery or macrosomia |
| Costa, 2019/Belgium | Retrospective cohort study | 6051 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | Two-step (50g GCT and 75g OGTT if GCT ≥7.8 mmol/L; CC criteria) vs one-step screening (IADPSG criteria) | GDM prevalence increased from 3.4% to 16.3%, without having a statistically significant impact on pregnancy outcomes |
| Cade, 2019/Australia | Quasi-experimental retrospective study | 14,498 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | 1991/1998 ADIPS criteria vs IADPSG criteria | Adoption of IADPSG criteria increased the incidence of GDM by 74% and the overall cost of care without obvious changes in immediate clinical outcomes |
| Meloncelli, 2020/Australia | Pre–post comparison study | 124,117 | All pregnant women giving birth >24 weeks | Two-step process and 1998 ADIPS GDM diagnostic criteria (in 2014) vs one-step process and IADPSG criteria (in 2016) | GDM diagnosis increased from 8.7% to 11.9%, with no observed changes to measured perinatal outcomes, except for a very small decrease in respiratory distress |
| Mirzamoradi, 2015/Iran | RCT | 189 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP, with a disturbed FPG or blood sugar at the OGTT | Interventional (one-step screening with IADPSG criteria) vs control group (two-step GDM screening according to ACOG recommendation and CC/NDDG criteria) | Although the treatment of mild GDM (IADPSG) could not significantly decrease severe gestational outcomes, it did significantly reduce the risk of hyperbilirubinemia (OR 0.25) and its subsequent complications |
| Abebe, 2017 (ongoing)/US | RCT | 921 | Pregnant women from 18 to 28 weeks gestation | 50g GCT for all participants, then 1:1 randomization in 75g (one-step, IADPSG) or 100g (two-step, CC) OGTT | No results published yet |
| Satodiya, 2017/India | RCT | 1000 | Pregnant women without ODIP | Two-step screening (ACOG recommendation, group A) vs one-step screening (IADPSG criteria, group B) | Incidence of GDM using IADPSG criteria was almost doubled (11.8% vs 19.2%), whereas maternal and fetal outcomes were comparable, except in 15.8% women diagnosed as GDM and suffered from hypoglycemia |
| Fadl, 2019 (ongoing)/Sweden | RCT | ± 65,000 | Pregnant women without ODIP | Intervention (WHO 2013 criteria) vs control group (former Swedish diagnostic criteria) | No results published yet (expected in 2020) |
| Hillier, 2021/US | RCT | 23,792 | Singleton pregnancies without history of bariatric surgery | One-step (2h 75g OGTT according to IADPSG criteria) vs two-step GDM screening (1h 50g GCT and a 3h 100g OGTT according to CC criteria) | Despite more diagnoses of GDM with the one-step approach (16.5% vs 8.5%), there were no significant differences in the risks of the primary outcomes relating to perinatal and maternal complications |
Abbreviations: UAE, United Arab Emirates; IADPSG, International Association of the Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups; GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; ADA, American Diabetes Association; ODIP, overt diabetes in pregnancy; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1C; CC, Carpenter and Coustan; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; GCT, glucose challenge test; LGA, large-for-gestational age; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; NDDG, National Diabetes Data Group; WHO, World Health Organization; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; ADIPS, Australasian diabetes in pregnancy society; RCT, randomized controlled trial; ACOG, American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
Selective Screening Based on Risk-Factors versus Universal Screening
| Author, Year/Country (Ref.) | Design | Subjects (N) | Study Population | GDM Criteria | Comparison | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cosson, 2006/France | Observational study | 4020 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | 2h 75g OGTT /FPG >5.3 mmol/L (French guidelines) or 2h >7.8 mmol/L (WHO 1999) or both | Selective (risk-factor based) vs universal screening | Universal rather than selective screening for GDM may improve outcomes as universal screening might reduce delay of diagnosis and care |
| Dahanayaka, 2012/Sri Lanka | Cross-sectional descriptive study | 405 | All pregnant women | IADPSG criteria vs WHO 1999 criteria at 24–28 weeks | GDM diagnosis based on IADPSG criteria (75g OGTT) vs risk-factor based approach (WHO 1999 criteria) | The risk-factor based approach missed 38.9% of GDM cases |
| Arora, 2013/Thailand | Cross-sectional study | 593 | All pregnant women | 1h 50g GCT followed by, if GCT ≥7.8 mmol/L, a 3h 100g OGTT/ACOG (CC) criteria | Risk vs non-risk factor group | 21.8% of GDM cases had no risk factor and only 52.8% of pregnant women would enter the screening process when using risk-based screening |
| Avalos, 2013/Ireland | Retrospective cohort study | 5500 | All pregnant women | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | Universal (IADPSG) vs selective GDM screening (Irish vs ADA vs NICE guidelines) | 20% (NICE), 16% (Irish), and 5% (ADA) of women with GDM had no risk factor and would have gone undiagnosed |
| Olagbuji, 2015/Nigeria | Prospective observational study | 1059 | Singleton pregnancies without T2DM | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–32 weeks/IADPSG criteria | Universal one-step (75g OGTT) vs risk factor based GDM screening at 24–32 weeks using WHO 1999, WHO 2013/IADPSG criteria | 20% of GDM cases would have been undiagnosed if risk-factor based approach was employed |
| Miailhe, 2015/France | Retrospective cohort study | 2187 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | Universal vs selective (risk factors were those recommended by the IADPSG and French guidelines) GDM screening | Selective screening would have missed 17% of GDM cases diagnosed with IADPSG criteria, but these cases were milder; LGA was associated with GDM in the presence but not in de absence of risk factors |
| Meththananda Herath, 2016/Sri Lanka | Clinic-based cross-sectional study | 452 | Pregnant women without ODIP | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria and WHO 1999 criteria | Risk factor based vs universal screening using IADPSG and WHO 1999 criteria | Risk-based screening had a lower detection rate of GDM; however, it reduced the necessity of screening by 20% |
| Agbozo, 2018/Ghana | Prospective blind comparison with a gold standard study | 491 | All pregnant women ≥15 years without ODIP | WHO 2013 criteria vs NICE 2015 criteria | Selective screening at 13–20 weeks using reagent-strip glycosuria vs RPG vs presence of ≥1 risk factor(s) vs universal screening at 20–34 weeks following the ‘one-step’ approach | Use of risk factors is a better screening tool compared to glycosuria/ RPG because risk factors would miss ±50% of the true positive rate, whereas glycosuria and RPG would miss ±90% |
| Benhalima, 2019/Belgium | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | 1811 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP and history of bariatric surgery | 2013 WHO criteria vs NICE 2015 (English) guidelines vs Irish guidelines from 2010 vs French guidelines from 2010 vs Dutch guidelines from 2010 | Universal screening (75g OGTT) vs selective screening according to NICE 2015 vs Irish guidelines from 2010 vs French guidelines from 2010 vs Dutch guidelines from 2010 | By applying selective screening by most European guidelines, about 50% of women would need an OGTT with the lowest number of missed cases (33%) by Dutch guidelines; GDM women without risk factors had higher rates of neonatal hypoglycemia than NGT women |
| Matta-Coelho, 2019/Portugal | Retrospective cohort study | 10,443 | All pregnant women | 2h 75g OGTT at 24–28 weeks/IADPSG criteria | Universal vs risk factor based GDM screening | 31.8% would have remained undiagnosed if risk factor based screening was implemented and women with risk factors diagnosed with GDM on universal screening presented worse obstetric and neonatal outcomes |
Abbreviations: GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; IADPSG, International Association of the Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; WHO, World Health Organization; ADA, American Diabetes Association; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; LGA, large-for-gestational age; RPG, random plasma glucose; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1C; ODIP, overt diabetes in pregnancy; NGT, normal glucose tolerance.
Use of FPG, HbA1c or pGCD59 as a Screening Tool
| Author, Year/Country (Ref.) | Design | Subjects (N) | Study Population | Comparison | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agarwal, 2010/UAE | Retrospective cohort study | 10,283 | All pregnant women screened for GDM at 24–28 weeks | GDM diagnosis based on IADPSG vs ADA criteria /FPG ≥4.2 mmol/L vs ≥4.4 mmol/lL vs ≥4.7 mmol/L vs 5.0 mmol/L vs 5.1 mmol/L | Rule-in/rule-out approach for FPG to predict GDM with FPG ≥ 5.1 mmol/L ruling in GDM in 28.9% of women with 100% specificity and FPG < 4.4 mmol/L ruling out GDM in 21.7% women at a sensitivity of 95.4%, eliminating half of the OGTTs needed |
| Göbl, 2012/Austria | Secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study | 1336 | Women without ODIP | Elaboration of a screening algorithm combining (1) FPG and (2) a multivariable risk estimation model focused on individuals with normal FPG levels to decide if a further OGTT is indicated | A risk estimation model in addition to FPG was accurate for detecting GDM in participants with normal FPG |
| Maesa, 2018/Spain | Retrospective study | 6573 | All pregnant women | Three groups: normal glycaemia vs glucose intolerance (1 point in OGTT equal or above established thresholds) vs GDM diagnosis | Women with FPG ≤3.4 mmol/L were at low risk of developing GDM with a sensitivity of 91.3%, thereby avoiding a two-step screening in 10% of their population |
| Saeedi, 2018/Sweden | Cross-sectional population-based study | 3616 | All pregnant women | Risk factors and FPG vs IADPSG criteria for GDM diagnosis | Risk factor screening for GDM was poorly predictive, but FPG of 4.8–5.0 mmol/L high sensitivity and specificity irrespective of diagnostic model and resulted in a low rate of OGTTs |
| Dickson, 2020/South Africa | Cross-sectional prospective study | 589 | Pregnant women without ODIP <28 weeks | Selective screening (risk factor based) vs universal application of FPG ≥4.5 mmol/L to identify women with GDM | Universal screening using FPG ≥4.5 mmol/L had greater sensitivity and specificity in identifying GDM and required fewer women to undergo a resource-intensive diagnostic OGTT than selective screening |
| O’Connor, 2012/Ireland | Prospective cohort study | 311 | Non-diabetic Caucasian pregnant and non-pregnant women | Non-pregnant vs T1 (trimester 1) vs T2 vs T3 | HbA1c trimester-specific reference intervals are required to better inform the management of pregnancies complicated by diabetes |
| Lowe, 2012/International | Secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study | 21,064 | Singleton pregnancies without ODIP | Association of HbA1c and model 1 vs model 2 vs model 3 | Associations were significantly stronger with glucose measures than with HbA1C for adverse neonatal outcomes, suggesting that measurement of HbA1c is not a useful alternative to an OGTT for diagnosing GDM in pregnant women |
| Rajput, 2012/India | Prospective cohort study | 607 | Women without ODIP | ADA vs IADPSG criteria/OGTT in combination with HbA1c <5.45% vs 5.45–5.95% vs >5.95% | HbA1c in combination with an OGTT obviated the need of OGTT in 61.8% of GDM cases and HbA1c >5.95% could be used to diagnose GDM in pregnant women with a specificity of 92.7% |
| Renz, 2015/Brazil | Diagnostic test accuracy study | 262 | Pregnant women without ODIP | Reference test (OGTT) vs index test (HbA1c)/sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratios of different HbA1c cut-off points | Different HbA1c cut-off points in combination with an OGTT may be a useful diagnostic tool for GDM |
| Khalafallah, 2016/Australia | Prospective cohort study | 480 | Singleton pregnancies without early GDM diagnosis (<24 weeks) | HbA1c levels (4.6–10%) vs OGTT results | Pregnant women with an HbA1c of ≥5.4% should proceed with an OGTT, resulting in a significant reduction in the burden of testing |
| Odsaeter, 2016/Norway | Retrospective analysis of RCT data | 677 | Singleton viable pregnancies without high risk | HbA1c levels alone or in combination with patient characteristics and GDM-WHO vs GDM-IADPSG | HbA1c may have a potential for screening for GDM since it is possible to exclude GDM in a significant proportion of women and could therefore reduce the number of OGTTs |
| Ghosh, 2017/US | Case-control study | 1000 | Women undergoing routine two-step GDM screening | pGCD59 in women with normal GCT (control subjects) vs women with a failed GCT and a subsequent OGTT (case patients) | One pGCD59 measurement during weeks 24–28 identified pregnancy-induced glucose intolerance with high sensitivity and specificity and could potentially identify the risk for LGA |
| Ma, 2020/Europe | Ancillary descriptive study | 693 | Obese women (BMI> 29) undergoing a 75g, 2h OGTT at <20 weeks | pGCD59 in NGT women vs GDM diagnosed <20 weeks vs GDM diagnosed 24–28 weeks | pGCD59 accurately identified GDM in early pregnancy; One-unit increase in maternal pGCD59 level was associated with 36% increased odds of delivering an LGA infant |
| Bogdanet, 2020 (ongoing)/Ireland | Prospective cohort study | ±2000 | Pregnant women without ODIP | pGCD59 at first antenatal visit, 24–28 weeks, in T3 and at 12 weeks postpartum vs 75g OGTT/ sensitivity and specificity of pGCD59 to predict the results of the OGTT, adverse outcomes and/or postpartum glucose intolerance | No results published yet |
Abbreviations: UAE, United Arab Emirates; GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; IADPSG, International Association of the Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups; ODIP, overt diabetes in pregnancy; ADA, American Diabetes Association; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; GCT, glucose challenge test; NDDG, National Diabetes Data Group; WHO, World Health Organization; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1C; pGCD59, plasma glycatedCD59; LGA, large for gestational age; BMI, body mass index.
Screening During the COVID-19 Pandemic
| Author, Year/Country (Ref.) | Pragmatic Approach | Main Results |
|---|---|---|
| Torlone, 2020/Italy | Screening for overt diabetes: FPG ≥6.9 mmol/L or RPG ≥11.1 mmol/L or HbA1c ≥6.5% | An FPG value can be considered diagnostic for GDM only when it is obtained at the gestational age when the OGTT should have been carried out (16–18 weeks in high-risk pregnant women or 24–28 weeks in medium-risk women) |
| McIntyre, 2020 (Diagnosis and management of GDM during COVID-19)/UK, Canada and Australia | Early in pregnancy: all guidelines: HbA1c ≥ 5.9% | Detecting only those with marked hyperglycemia |
| Thangaratinam, 2020 | Early GDM screening: additional tests at booking (HbA1c and RPG) to detect overt diabetes and identify those at highest risk for GDM. Suggested thresholds and actions: | Using FPG alone will only pick up half of all women with GDM, based on NICE or IADPSG criteria. Combining FPG with HbA1c may improve the detection rate. Maintaining existing FPG thresholds may be preferable, and services may consider lower thresholds consistent with the IADPSG diagnostic criteria (FPG ≥ 5.1) if resources allow |
| Van Gemert, 2020/Australia | ADIPS temporary criteria during the COVID-19 pandemic are based on the Queensland Clinical Guidelines: | Using a FPG ≤4.6 mmol/L as cut-off to determine that a 75g 2h OGTT is not necessary will reduce the number of women being potentially exposed, but would miss nearly a third of GDM cases |
| Meek, 2020/UK, Canada, New Zealand and Australia | To evaluate the diagnostic and prognostic performance of alternative diagnostic strategies to 2h 75g OGTTs: HbA1c, RPG and FPG | RPG at 12 weeks, and FPG or HbA1c at 28 weeks identify women with hyperglycemia at risk of suboptimal pregnancy outcomes |
| McIntyre, 2020 (Testing for GDM during COVID-19)/UK, Canada and Australia | All post COVID-19 modified pathways reduced GDM frequency. Missed GDMs in Canada gave similar rates of pregnancy complications, while using UK and Australian modifications, the missed GDM group was at slightly and substantially lower risk. | |
| Seshiah, 2020/India | “Single test procedure” for diagnosing GDM: 2h PG ≥ 7.8 mmol/L with 75g oral glucose administered to a pregnant woman in the fasting or non-fasting state, without regard to the time of the last meal (glucose load can also be taken at home and the pregnant woman can visit the hospital 2h after the glucose ingestion to give a single sample for plasma glucose estimation) | The economical and evidence based “single test procedure” of DIPSI is most appropriate for screening during COVID-19 as performing OGTTs is resource intensive, the fasting state is impractical with very high dropout rate. |
| Van-de-l’Isle, 2020/UK | NICE guidelines methodology (75g 2h OGTT) vs RCOG COVID testing for GDM (two-step testing approach): | The overall rate of women identified as having GDM decreased from 7.7% to 4.2% and the COVID-19 regimen failed to detect 57% women identified as GDM |
| Nachtergaele, 2021/France | Reference standard testing: OGTT at 22–30 weeks according to IADPSG/WHO criteria applying universal screening | Consideration of a history of HIP and measuring first FPG can avoid more than 80% of OGTTs and identify women with the highest risk of adverse HIP-related events |
| Zhu, 2021 /Australia | Initial division into groups according to FPG results (mmol/L): FPG <4.7, FPG 4.7–5.0 and FPG ≥5.1 | HbA1c and FPG are poor screening tests for GDM. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the OGTT should be given clinical priority in high-risk patients, an HbA1c cut-off of 5.7% is proposed if it is used for screening. Elevated FPG is a significant predictor for needing medical management for GDM and could be used to enable individualized treatment |
Abbreviations: FPG, fasting plasma glucose; RPG, random plasma glucose; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; UK, United Kingdom; CAN, Canada; AUS, Australia; WHO, World Health Organization; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; IADPSG, International Association of the Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups; ADIPS, Australasian diabetes in pregnancy society; RCOG, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; HIP, hyperglycemia in pregnancy; MF, metformin.