Pregnant women who smoke face a
higher risk of developing diabetes during pregnancy -- a condition
known as gestational diabetes -- according to a new study.
Previous studies have linked
smoking to the risk of type 2 diabetes, the study's authors
point out in the American Journal of Epidemiology, but the
relationship between smoking and gestational diabetes remains
unclear.
Dr. Lucinda J. England from
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in
Bethesda, Maryland, and colleagues used data from 4,500 pregnant
women to investigate.
Average blood glucose levels
were highest among women who currently smoked, the team reports,
and were lowest among women who never smoked or who quit before
or during pregnancy.
Rates of gestational diabetes
were highest among women who smoked (4.4 percent) and lowest
among those who had never smoked (1.8 percent), the investigators
found. Women who quit before or during pregnancy had intermediate
rates of gestational diabetes (1.9 percent and 2.5 percent).
If in fact smoking causes gestational
diabetes, the researchers write, "then 47 percent of gestational
diabetes mellitus in smokers and 10 percent in all women in
our study population could potentially be attributed to tobacco
exposure."
Thus, they conclude, "Smoking
may be an important modifiable risk factor for gestational
diabetes mellitus."
SOURCE: American Journal of
Epidemiology, December 15, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
December 30, 2004