AI Article Synopsis

  • Various international guidelines for diagnosing gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) have been developed, but they differ widely and lack a consistent definition for glycemia levels, leading to potential misdiagnosis.
  • The National Priorities Research Program funded research that concluded the diagnosis of GDM should include graded levels of dysglycemia rather than simply a binary presence or absence of the condition.
  • A new diagnostic criterion, called the NPRP criterion, has been proposed, which uses a single numerical summary from the oral glucose tolerance test to categorize women into four levels: normal, impaired, GDM, and high risk GDM, aiming to improve diagnosis accuracy and reduce rates of both under and over-diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Over the years, several international guidelines have been developed by specialist organizations for the diagnosis of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). However, these guidelines vary and lack consensus on what level of glycemia defines GDM and worryingly, there is now evidence of over- or- under-diagnosis of women with GDM by current criteria. Towards this end, the National Priorities Research Program (NPRP) funded a program of research aimed at elucidating the problem with GDM diagnosis. It was determined, on completion of the project, that the solution required diagnosis of graded levels of dysglycemia in pregnancy and not just a diagnosis of presence or absence of GDM. A new diagnostic criterion (called the NPRP criterion) was created based on a single numerical summary of the three readings from the oral glucose tolerance test (GTT) that diagnosed women in pregnancy into four levels: normal, impaired, GDM and high risk GDM. This paper now examines existing GDM criteria vis-à-vis the NPRP criterion. It is noted that no significant change has happened over the years for existing criteria except for a gradual reduction in the threshold values of individual time-points or the number of time points, bringing us towards over-diagnosis of GDM in pregnancy. The new criterion unifies all readings from the GTT into one numerical value and, because it results in four levels of glycemia, represents a new way forwards for GDM diagnosis and can potentially reduce the rates of under diagnosis and over diagnosis of GDM.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s43032-024-01514-xDOI Listing

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