4.5 Article

Identifying women with gestational diabetes based on maternal characteristics: an analysis of four Norwegian prospective studies

Journal

BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12884-021-04086-9

Keywords

Gestational diabetes mellitus; Pre pregnancy BMI; Pregnancy; Screening; Diagnostic criteria

Funding

  1. South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study assessed the prevalence of gestational diabetes using three diagnostic criteria and evaluated the predictive accuracy of commonly used risk factors. The results showed that the prevalence of GDM was higher for non-European women under the 2013WHO criteria. Clinical risk factors like age and BMI were not effective in predicting GDM without a high percentage of women undergoing OGTT testing.
Background There is still no worldwide agreement on the best diagnostic thresholds to define gestational diabetes (GDM) or the optimal approach for identifying women with GDM. Should all pregnant women perform an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) or can easily available maternal characteristics, such as age, BMI and ethnicity, indicate which women to test? The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of GDM by three diagnostic criteria and the predictive accuracy of commonly used risk factors. Methods We merged data from four Norwegian cohorts (2002-2013), encompassing 2981 women with complete results from a universally offered OGTT. Prevalences were estimated based on the following diagnostic criteria: 1999WHO (fasting plasma glucose (FPG) >= 7.0 or 2-h glucose >= 7.8 mmol/L), 2013WHO (FPG >= 5.1 or 2-h glucose >= 8.5 mmol/L), and (2017)Norwegian (FPG >= 5.3 or 2-h glucose >= 9 mmol/L). Multiple logistic regression models examined associations between GDM and maternal factors. We applied the 2013WHO and (2017)Norwegian criteria to evaluate the performance of different thresholds of age and BMI. Results The prevalence of GDM was 10.7, 16.9 and 10.3%, applying the 1999WHO, 2013WHO, and the (2017)Norwegian criteria, respectively, but was higher for women with non-European background when compared to European women (14.5 vs 10.2%, 37.7 vs 13.8% and 27.0 vs 7.8%). While advancing age and elevated BMI increased the risk of GDM, no risk factors, isolated or in combination, could identify more than 80% of women with GDM by the latter two diagnostic criteria, unless at least 70-80% of women were offered an OGTT. Using the (2017)Norwegian criteria, the combination age >= 25 years or BMI >= 25 kg/m(2) achieved the highest sensitivity (96.5%) with an OGTT required for 93% of European women. The predictive accuracy of risk factors for identifying GDM was even lower for non-European women. Conclusions The prevalence of GDM was similar using the 1999WHO and (2017)Norwegian criteria, but substantially higher with the 2013WHO criteria, in particular for ethnic non-European women. Using clinical risk factors such as age and BMI is a poor pre-diagnostic screening method, as this approach failed to identify a substantial proportion of women with GDM unless at least 70-80% were tested.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available