AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how breastfeeding affects maternal glucose levels in women with type 1 diabetes using different insulin therapy methods.
  • It analyzes data from infant-feeding diaries and continuous glucose monitoring over three time points postpartum, focusing on glucose changes during breastfeeding episodes.
  • Results show a slight drop in maternal glucose levels after nighttime breastfeeding, particularly more significant with open-loop insulin therapy than with closed-loop therapy, which had a muted response.

Article Abstract

Aims/hypothesis: This study aimed to describe the relationship between breastfeeding episodes and maternal glucose levels, and to assess whether this differs with closed-loop vs open-loop (sensor-augmented pump) insulin therapy.

Methods: Infant-feeding diaries were collected at 6 weeks, 12 weeks and 24 weeks postpartum in a trial of postpartum closed-loop use in 18 women with type 1 diabetes. Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) data were used to identify maternal glucose patterns within the 3 h of breastfeeding episodes. Generalised mixed models adjusted for breastfeeding episodes in the same woman, repeat breastfeeding episodes, carbohydrate intake, infant age at time of feeding and early pregnancy HbA. This was a secondary analysis of data collected during a randomised trial (ClinicalTrials.gov registration no. NCT04420728).

Results: CGM glucose remained above 3.9 mmol/l in the 3 h post-breastfeeding for 93% (397/427) of breastfeeding episodes. There was an overall decrease in glucose at nighttime within 3 h of breastfeeding (1.1 mmol l h decrease on average; p=0.009). A decrease in nighttime glucose was observed with open-loop therapy (1.2 ± 0.5 mmol/l) but was blunted with closed-loop therapy (0.4 ± 0.3 mmol/l; p<0.01, open-loop vs closed-loop).

Conclusions/interpretation: There is a small decrease in glucose after nighttime breastfeeding that usually does not result in maternal hypoglycaemia; this appears to be blunted with the use of closed-loop therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11447145PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00125-024-06227-zDOI Listing

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