Screening for gestational diabetes mellitus


  • It has been estimated that diabetes affects an estimated 415 million people globally and is projected to increase to 642 million by 2040.

  • There is also an equally high burden of prediabetes, approximately 318 million people and likely to increase to 481 million by 2040.

  • These findings are accompanied by high levels of overweight and obese adults. The WHO data show that more than half of the world’s adult population was overweight (39%) or obese (13%), including an estimated 42 million pregnant women.

  • Hyperglycaemia in pregnancy (HIP) is a broad term that encompasses various forms of glucose dysregulation seen during pregnancy [DM T1, DMT2, gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM)]

  • GDM is a condition with abnormal glucose intolerance diagnosed for the first time during pregnancy at routine testing.

  • The international Diabetes Federation has estimated that 21 million live births—one in six (16.8%)—occur in women with some form of HIP, of which 2.5% may be due to overt diabetes in pregnancy. The remaining 14.3% (one in seven pregnancies) is due to GDM.

  • More than one third of people with diabetes and a majority of people with prediabetes remain undiagnosed and unaware of the condition.

  • The diagnosis is most often made in the second and third trimester by an oral glucose tolerance test.

  • GDM affects up to almost 20% of the pregnancies in Europe.

  • Besides glucosuria, women with GDM most often do not have any signs of the condition, unless there is excessive foetal growth that influences the well-being of the women.

  • Women diagnosed with GDM are at increased risk of excessive foetal growth and birth complications.

  • Women developing GDM may be more insulin resistant even before pregnancy or may not be capable of increasing Insulin secretion sufficiently to maintain a normal glucose tolerance throughout pregnancy.

Prepregnancy risk factors include

  • Obesity/overweight before conception

  • A family history of GDM

  • History of impaired glucose tolerance

  • Ethnicity with high diabetes prevalence

  • A previous birth of a large for gestational age infant

  • A family history of diabetes (both first and second line relatives)

  • Prolonged glucocorticoid exposure

  • PCOS

  • Subfertility or conception using assisted reproductive technologies

  • Recent research suggests that the microbiota could play a role as well

    During pregnancy there may be cumulative risk factors as placental hormones also play a role in increasing insulin resistance:

  • Multiple pregnancies

  • Excessive weight gain

  • Excessive foetal growth

  • Polyhydramnios

Effect of gestational diabetes mellitus on both mother and baby

Mother

  • Hypertensive disorders (preeclampsia, gestational hypertension)

  • Excessive foetal growth (macrosomia)

  • Hydramnios

  • Preterm labour

  • Venous thromboembolism

  • Risk of operative birth (Caesarean section, assisted instrumental birth)

  • Birth Trauma (shoulder dystocia)

  • Postoperative/postpartum infection

  • Postoperative/postpartum haemorrhage

Postnatal

  • Failure to initiate and/or maintain breast feeding

Foetal/neonatal

  • Respiratory distress disease

  • Cardiomyopathy

  • Neonatal hypoglycaemia

  • Neonatal polycythemia

  • Neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia

  • Neonatal hypocalcaemia

  • Stillbirth

  • Neonatal death

  • Nonchromosomal congenital malformations

Long-term impact

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