Stricter blood sugar control for gestational diabetes could reduce risks for bub but increase them for mum

Publicly released:
Australia; New Zealand; International; NSW
Photo by Omar Lopez on Unsplash
Photo by Omar Lopez on Unsplash

Lowering the target blood sugar level for those with gestational diabetes during pregnancy may reduce the risk of birth complications for the baby, but increase them for the mother, according to Australian, NZ and international research. The team trialled lower blood sugar targets across several NZ hospitals to see if this could reduce the amount of especially large babies, who can face obesity and diabetes risks later in life. While the researchers say the lower blood sugar target didn't significantly impact baby size, the risk of death or injury to the baby was 1.3% compared to 2.6% for the higher blood sugar target. The risk of major haemorrhage, clotting problems or other health complications for the mother was 5.9% for those with the lower target compared to 3% for the higher target.

Media release

From: PLOS

Stricter blood sugar control in gestational diabetes leads to better outcomes for babies

Tighter control, however, may increase the risk of certain major complications for mothers

Lowering the target blood sugar level for mothers with gestational diabetes did not reduce the risk of large babies, a new study finds, but it did reduce the risk of death or injury to the baby during birth. Caroline Crowther of the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and colleagues report these findings on September 8th in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine.

Gestational diabetes is a significant and growing health problem worldwide, which often causes the birth of especially large babies who face a high risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes later in life. Women can change their diets and take medication to control their blood sugar, but currently, it is unknown how tightly those levels should be controlled to minimize the risks to the mother and baby.

To determine if stricter control is better, researchers conducted a study of 1,100 pregnant women with gestational diabetes seen at 10 hospitals in New Zealand. During the study, each hospital switched from higher to lower blood sugar targets, and outcomes for women and babies in each group were compared. While tighter blood sugar control did not lead to babies being larger than expected, it did reduce the risk of infant death, trauma, and shoulder dystocia during birth by half. However, tighter control almost doubled the risk of serious health outcomes for the mother, such as a major postpartum hemorrhage, among other complications.

The new results can help doctors decide what blood sugar level individual patients should strive for while managing their gestational diabetes. The study is the largest randomized comparison of two blood sugar level targets reported to date in a diverse population. However, the researchers point out that there is still a need to confirm their findings through additional randomized trials and in different healthcare settings.

Crowther adds, “This unique trial allowed for the sequential implementation of the newly, recommended tighter treatment targets for women with gestational diabetes and assessed if there are true benefits, without harm, to use of tighter treatment targets.”

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Research PLOS, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
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conference:
PLOS Medicine
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Auckland, Garvan Institute of Medical Research
Funder: The trial was funded by the Health Research Council of New Zealand (Grant Number 14/499; CC, RH, JB, JA). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.
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