Latest News

Task force affirms routine gestational diabetes testing


 

FROM JAMA

Support screening with counseling on risk reduction

The USPSTF recommendation is important at this time because “the prevalence of gestational diabetes is increasing secondary to rising rates of obesity,” Iris Krishna, MD, of Emory University, Atlanta, said in an interview.

“In 2014, based on a systematic review of literature, the USPSTF recommended screening all asymptomatic pregnant women for gestational diabetes mellitus [GDM] starting at 24 weeks’ gestation. The recommended gestational age for screening coincides with increasing insulin resistance during pregnancy with advancing gestational age,” Dr. Krishna said.

“An updated systematic review by the USPSTF concluded that existing literature continues to affirm current recommendations of universal screening for GDM at 24 weeks gestation or later. There continues, however, to be no consensus on the optimal approach to screening,” she noted.

“Screening can be performed as a two-step or one-step approach,” said Dr. Krishna. “The two-step approach is commonly used in the United States, and all pregnant women are first screened with a 50-gram oral glucose solution followed by a diagnostic test if they have a positive initial screening.

“Women with risk factors for diabetes, such as prior GDM, obesity, strong family history of diabetes, or history of fetal macrosomia, should be screened early in pregnancy for GDM and have the GDM screen repeated at 24 weeks’ gestation or later if normal in early pregnancy,” Dr. Krishna said. “Pregnant women should be counseled on the importance of diet and exercise and appropriate weight gain in pregnancy to reduce the risk of GDM. Overall, timely diagnosis of gestational diabetes is crucial to improving maternal and fetal pregnancy outcomes.”

The full recommendation statement is also available on the USPSTF website. The research was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Krishna had no disclosures, but serves on the editorial advisory board of Ob.Gyn News.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Quicker fertility rebound in young women with breast cancer
MDedge Internal Medicine
Bariatric surgery leads to better cardiovascular function in pregnancy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Screen pregnant women for OSA, given known risks
MDedge Internal Medicine
Postpartum depression affects dads, too
MDedge Internal Medicine
Pregnant women no longer detained by ICE
MDedge Internal Medicine
Does optimal iron absorption include vitamin C?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Obstetric units place twice as many wrong-patient orders as medical-surgical units
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA to revise statin pregnancy contraindication
MDedge Internal Medicine
Nearly half of female surgeons surveyed lost a pregnancy
MDedge Internal Medicine
ACOG, SMFM urge all pregnant women to get COVID-19 vaccine
MDedge Internal Medicine