NIH starts study to determine best time for gestational diabetes screening
A new study supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) aims to improve gestational diabetes screening and diagnosis by better understanding blood glucose levels throughout pregnancy, announced NIH.
Gestational diabetes is usually diagnosed between the 24th and 28th week of pregnancy, which may be too late to counteract some long-lasting harm to the pregnant person and child. During pregnancy there are changes in glucose metabolism—the way glucose, often called blood sugar, is used in the body — to meet the needs of the developing fetus, but the details of these changes are unknown. With sites around the country, the Glycemic Observation and Metabolic Outcomes in Mothers and Offspring study, or GO MOMs, aims to fill in these knowledge gaps. The study will enroll about 2,150 people without diabetes and in their first trimester of pregnancy. Funded by NIH’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, GO MOMs will use continuous glucose monitoring technology to map blood glucose levels throughout pregnancy.
“GO MOMs will set the foundation for determining future approaches to the screening, diagnosis, and eventually the treatment of elevated blood glucose during pregnancy,” said NIDDK program director Dr. Barbara Linder, the project scientist for the study. “By understanding more about glucose levels during pregnancy, we can identify potential early indicators of gestational diabetes and pinpoint the best times to screen for and treat it.”
GO MOMs builds on a previous NIH-funded landmark study of hyperglycemia and adverse pregnancy outcomes and its follow-up, HAPO and HAPO-FUS, which found that people with elevated blood glucose during pregnancy – even if not high enough to meet the definition of gestational diabetes – are significantly more likely to develop type 2 diabetes or prediabetes years after pregnancy than their counterparts without elevated blood glucose.
In addition, HAPO-FUS demonstrated that children born to people with elevated blood glucose during pregnancy were more likely to have obesity and impaired glucose metabolism a decade later. The effects in children, called metabolic imprinting, are thought to occur much earlier during pregnancy than when gestational diabetes is currently screened.
The data collected from GO MOMs will help determine timing and approach for future clinical trials to understand when and how to screen for and treat elevated blood glucose in pregnancy, and if this treatment will have any effect on children years later.
“By the time people are currently screened for gestational diabetes, it could be too late to avoid the long-lasting health effects,” said Dr. William Lowe, professor of medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, and study chair for GO MOMs. “We hope to recruit a diverse group of GO MOMs participants to help pinpoint key changes during pregnancy and see if there are associations with a subsequent gestational diabetes diagnosis and large size at birth for the offspring.”
Northwestern University is the study’s coordinating center and a study site. Other study locations include:
· Columbia University, New York City
· Kaiser Center for Health Research, Honolulu
· Kaiser Center for Health Research NW, Portland, Oregon
· Magee Women’s Hospital, Pittsburgh
· Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
· Tufts Medical Center, Boston
· Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, Providence
· Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
The study is open now for people in their first trimester of pregnancy without diabetes and willing to use a continuous glucose monitoring device for 10 days at four times during their pregnancy. Information and enrollment is at: www.GoMomsStudy.org.