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Early
Prenatal Diabetes
Testing Not Necessary
Excerpt
By Colette
Bouchez,
HealthScoutNews
Getting tested for diabetes during your first prenatal doctor
visit is often considered routine pregnancy care, but the test
may not be necessary.
That's the conclusion of researchers
from the Kaiser Foundation Hospital in California, where studies
found the test has such a high rate of false positive results
that it does little in the way of predicting who is really at
risk.
"Traditionally, the prenatal
exam includes a fasting plasma glucose screening, which measures
the level of sugar in the blood after a period of fasting,"
explains Dr. Michael Silverstein, an assistant clinical professor
of obstetrics and gynecology at New York University Medical Center.
What this new study shows, Silverstein
adds, is that the screening may serve little purpose -- other
than uncovering a hidden insulin problem that may have existed
before the pregnancy.
"According to the research,
the screening does not appear to be that accurate in predicting
gestational diabetes," Silverstein says.
Much like regular diabetes, gestational
diabetes impairs the ability of the hormone insulin to properly
move sugar from the blood to the tissues and organs where it is
needed to produce energy.
In the beginning of a pregnancy,
a woman's natural insulin production overpowers the placental
hormones, so sugar levels don't soar. However, experts say that
as a baby grows, so much of the insulin-destroying placental hormones
is made that they eventually overpower the mother's insulin production.
When this occurs, gestational diabetes
develops -- usually somewhere around the 24th week of pregnancy.
According to the American Diabetes Foundation, it's a problem
that affects 200,000 women a year.
Although a fasting plasma glucose
screening administered during the first prenatal visit was always
thought to help identify those women at risk for this problem,
the new study shows testing this early may be a waste of time.
In the new report, study author
Dr. David Sacks says the high false positive rate "makes
it an inefficient screening test."
The study, published in the June
issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology, involved 4,507 women,
all of whom were tested for diabetes using the fasting plasma
glucose screening early in their pregnancy. Those whose tests
revealed sugar levels greater than 126 milligrams/deciliter of
blood were re-tested. If sugar levels remained high, they were
automatically referred for high-risk pregnancy diabetes care.
In the final analysis, 302 women
were diagnosed with gestational diabetes. Of those, 12 were in
the first testing group, where blood sugar levels initially measured
126 or higher. An additional 34 women were identified before their
24th week of pregnancy after a fasting glucose test revealed levels
between 100 and 126.
However, the study also found a
high false positive rate of some 57 percent among the women who
tested early on. This, say researchers, reduced the "sensitivity"
of the test to just 80 percent, a relatively low number in terms
of accuracy.
The final conclusion: Fasting plasma
glucose screening early on in pregnancy is not sensitive enough
to identify those at risk for this problem.
"I believe that this is an
important finding and one that we need to consider very carefully
when deciding the right time to screen a pregnant woman for gestational
diabetes," Silverstein says. He also believes that, unless
risk factors are present, screening early in the third trimester
would be the best time to reflect the most accurate diagnosis.
Risk factors for gestational diabetes
include obesity, family history of diabetes, previous birth of
a large baby or a stillbirth, or previous birth of a child with
birth defects.
Normally, gestational diabetes
is controlled via diet and exercise, and sugar levels usually
return to normal shortly after delivery.
However, even when controlled,
babies born to mothers with gestational diabetes can be larger
than normal -- a condition known as "macrosomia," often
making a Caesarean delivery necessary. In addition, these babies
may have an increased risk of low blood sugar following birth,
as well as an increased risk of jaundice and an increased risk
of respiratory distress syndrome, a disorder that can make it
hard for them to breathe. Later in life, they may also have a
higher risk of diabetes and obesity.
More information
To learn more about blood sugar
testing, visit Your
Family Doctor. To find out more about gestational diabetes,
check out The
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Reference
Source 101
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