Prior GDM? Treat without screening.
by Tucker, Miriam E.
AMSTERDAM -- Seeing and presumptively treating all women with
previous gestational diabetes mellitus for GDM early in their subsequent
pregnancies--without rescreening them--is likely to improve maternal and
fetal outcomes, Dr. Christina S. Cotzias said at the annual meeting of
the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
Recurrence rates of GDM in subsequent pregnancies among women who
had the condition in a previous pregnancy range from about 30% to 70%,
depending on the population studied. In general, the heavier and less
white the population, the greater the GDM recurrence rate. And among
women who do have GDM recurrence, some studies have suggested that
glucose intolerance may occur earlier in subsequent pregnancies than in
the initial one, said Dr. Cotzias of the department of obstetrics and
gynecology at West Middlesex University Hospital, Isle-worth, England.
The Middlesex hospital's obstetric unit serves a multiethnic
community with a large Asian population. A retrospective case note
analysis was performed for 419 women who were treated for GDM at the
hospital during 2000-2005, of whom 123 (29%) had GDM in a prior
pregnancy and 296 (71%) did not. Those with previous GDM were
significantly older (median age 34 vs. 32 years), and heavier (BMI 29
vs. 27 kg/[m.sup.2]), but there were no differences in ethnicity between
the groups, both of which were approximately one-half Asian, one-quarter
white, and about one-fifth black; the remainder were other ethnicities.
Hemoglobin [A.sub.1c] levels were significantly higher among the
women with previous GDM: 27% were at or above 7%, compared with 15%
among those with newly diagnosed GDM. The women with previous GDM were
much more likely to require insulin therapy (67% vs. 47%) and to be
started on insulin sooner (25 vs. 34 weeks' gestation).
Of the 82 women in the previous GDM group who required insulin,
nearly two-thirds (48, or 59%) needed it prior to 28 weeks'
gestation, the time of routine GDM screening. "If we waited to
screen those women, we would miss nearly 60% of those who need insulin
before 28 weeks," Dr. Cotzias noted.
Exactly half of each group had spontaneous vaginal delivery;
cesarean section rates also did not differ significantly in the two
groups (44% of those with previous GDM and 40% of those without). There
were no significant differences between the two groups in any neonatal
outcome, including shoulder dystocia, stillbirth, neonatal abnormality,
or birth weight.
Of the women who came back for follow up after delivery, 23% of 66
with previous GDM and 22% of the 188 without--an insignificant
difference--had abnormal glucose tolerance test results.
"I extrapolate the findings to suggest that if I left these
women until 28 weeks' gestation and then started [treatment], I
would have missed the boat and had worse outcomes. I can't prove
it, but that's what the data suggest," Dr. Cotzias said.
BY MIRIAM E. TUCKER
Senior Writer
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