Overt diabetes imposes a comparable burden on outcomes as pregestational diabetes: a cohort study

In this large cohort of pregnant women with diabetes, one third was unaware of having hyperglycemia, thereafter labelled as overt diabetes cases. Their pregnancy outcomes were very similar to those of women with an already known pre-pregnancy diabetes. Some factors were associated with worse outcomes: high pregestational BMI was associated with higher risk of preeclampsia and macrosomia, while more than recommended weight gain was only associated with macrosomia; use of insulin decreased the risk of preeclampsia. NICU admission was associated with maternal preeclampsia and higher third trimester HbA1c, as well as with either LGA or SGA babies. Perinatal mortality was associated with higher maternal HbA1c at booking and with being SGA.

Preconception care is a fundamental cornerstone to ensure healthier and safer pregnancy outcomes in women with diabetes [15]. A thorough approach should ideally include women´s care by a multidisciplinary team, focusing on education about the impact of diabetes on pregnancy outcomes, especially upon congenital anomalies and perinatal morbidity and mortality; teaching and supporting diabetes self-management skills; and warranting effective contraceptive methods until the best possible metabolic control is achieved. Before encouraging conception, chronic complications of diabetes have to be addressed and potentially harmful treatments, such as some anti-hyperglycemic and anti-hypertensive drugs, substituted by medications considered safer in pregnancy, along with folate supplementation. Nevertheless, when we face real life, many of these recommendations are not accomplished, due to several factors, including having diabetes not diagnosed before pregnancy and/or lack or misuse of contraceptive methods. We had no information on contraception in women of this cohort.

Undiagnosed diabetes is prevalent, affecting primarily individuals living in low and middle-income countries, where rates can reach almost 50.0% in adults aged 20–79 years [16]. In Brazil, the estimated proportion of undiagnosed diabetes in adults is 31.9% [16]; and diabetes rates in women of childbearing age vary from 1.0% in the 18–24 years age group to 3.9% in those aged up to 44 years [17]. Globally, hyperglycemia affects 16.7% of pregnancies; of these, 9.1% are cases of type 1 or type 2 diabetes first diagnosed in pregnancy [16]. Few studies report rates of diabetes first detected in pregnancy. In a Canadian study, 2.6% of women diagnosed with gestational diabetes presented type 2 diabetes during the first year postpartum and were labelled as having had previous overt diabetes; this represents less than 0.2% of the total study sample [18]. In a Brazilian cohort of pregnant women with hyperglycemia, ~ 21.0% of 224 women presented overt diabetes [19]. The rate of undiagnosed diabetes in our cohort reflects rates described for non-pregnant adults, despite many women already presented traditional risk factors: age ≥ 35 years (~ 42%), the cutoff point for age currently recommended for diabetes screening [3, 20]; history of gestational diabetes in previous pregnancies (~ 30.0%); and family history of diabetes (~ 61.0%) [3]. In two published papers, women considered as having overt diabetes displayed baseline characteristics quite similar to those with pregestational type 2 diabetes [18, 21], as here. In an Italian cohort, 66.7% of non-pregnant women with type 2 diabetes at childbearing age presented at least one high risk pre-conceptional feature, as obesity or hypertension [22]. In our cohort, if women with overt diabetes were screened before pregnancy with FPG or HbA1c due to their risk factors, they would have been diagnosed earlier, as 58.8% had at least one positive diagnostic criterion. Therefore, many women diagnosed with overt diabetes in our study are, most likely, women with diabetes antedating pregnancy that went unrecognized due to several factors, among them a low educational level and/or living in deprived settings. Social vulnerability was associated with worse control of diabetes in pregnancy in women with pregestational diabetes [23]; the same reasoning can be applied to cases of diabetes undiagnosed before pregnancy.

The comparison of baseline characteristics of women in our cohort to those of women with type 2 diabetes from other cohorts revealed similar maternal age, in the thirties [7, 8, 18, 21]. Obesity was almost as frequent (65.0% [7]; 51.6% [8]; and here, ~ 70.0%). In Brazil, obesity is present in 11.2% of women aged 18–24 years and in 25.7% of those aged 35–44 years, with higher rates in women with lower schooling [17]. Obesity has been increasing over the years [24], but in this cohort of pregnant women with type 2 diabetes, astonishing high rates (~ 70%) were seen during the study time span. Chronic hypertension was frequent in other cohorts − 12.0% [18]; 18.7% [21]; 10.3% [7]; and 16.4% [8], but here we saw the highest rate, ~ 23.0%. Women of childbearing age in Brazil have high rates of chronic hypertension, ~ 25% [17]. When we compared the Canadian women with overt diabetes [18] to the group of women with overt diabetes herein, rates of maternal age ≥ 26 years (88.2%) and previous gestational diabetes (30.4%) were similar; and previous hypertension rates were much lower in other cohorts [8, 21], highlighting a riskier profile of Brazilian women. Insulin resistance may play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of obesity, type 2 diabetes and preeclampsia. Here, insulin treatment decreased the risk of preeclampsia in ~ 30.0%. As hyperglycemia may promote a pro-inflammatory environment, lowering glycemic levels with insulin treatment could have had a protective effect [25].

Importantly, the majority of women with overt diabetes was diagnosed in the first trimester, different from another study [21], but reached specialized prenatal care almost a month after their counterparts with pregestational diabetes, despite having similar rates of well-known risk factors. But even women with known pregestational diabetes arrived late, here. This is in contrast with results of a large study: women with pregestational diabetes arrived earlier, around the 9th week; even though, only 22.0% of those women reported use of folate supplementation, a key feature of preconception care [7].

Other maternal factors were relevant. HbA1c values were very similar between groups, as well as the pattern of weight gain, with only ~ 26.0% of women gaining weight in the recommended range. HbA1c improved in most women, and in those with a baseline HbA1c ≥ 6.5%, more than half reached values < 6.5% in the third trimester. As expected, higher third trimester HbA1c was associated with worse pregnancy outcomes, mainly neonatal, reflecting the effects of sustained intrauterine hyperglycemia. These findings are in agreement with those described by others: a third trimester HbA1c ≥ 6.5% was associated with an almost fourfold increased risk of perinatal death [7].

Preterm birth rates were similar to those described in other studies [7, 8]. Comparing women with overt diabetes in the Canadian study [18] to those in our study, ~ 15.0% of women delivered before 37 gestational weeks vs. ~ 21.0%, respectively. Rates of cesarean section here (~ 75.0%) were the highest, compared to other samples; and 50% higher than the general rate of cesarean section in Brazil (~ 56%) [26]. Determinants of cesarean section are complex in our country, therefore limiting comparisons.

Neonatal outcomes were quite different from those of other cohorts. Congenital malformations were at least two times as frequent here (12.6%), compared either to women with pregestational type 2 diabetes (4.0% [7]) or to women with overt diabetes (5.6% [7]; 1.1% [21]). Comparison among series may be biased by different methods of investigation and classification. The high frequency may also point to a lack of preconception care in our series, since women began pregnancy with a mean value HbA1c of 7.2%, compared to 6.9% in another study [7]; women with pre-pregnancy diabetes displayed significantly higher values of HbA1c, similar to what was already described [21].

Macrosomia occurred at rates similar to another study, ~ 15.0% [8]. Rates of SGA varied widely [7, 21], and, among women with overt diabetes, rates were 6.9% here, compared to 9.5% [18] and 11.0% [21] in other studies. Around 23% of the SGA babies in our cohort had some congenital anomaly or chromosomal disorder. LGA babies were common across series, more than 20.0% [7, 8, 18, 21]; and in women with undiagnosed diabetes, rates were ~ 22.0% [18, 21], compared to 37.0% here. Not surprisingly, delivery of LGA babies was ~ 38.0% and of macrosomic babies, ~ 15%: pregestational obesity was present in ~ 70.0% of women, and ~ 37.0% had more than recommended weight gain during pregnancy. Both situations, especially preconception obesity, are known risk factors for delivering heavier babies [27]. Comparisons of birth weight categories must be interpreted with caution, because rates depend on the reference chart used.

Neonatal hypoglycemia was reported in 26.4% in women with undiagnosed diabetes [18], compared to 19.1% here. The lower rate of hypoglycemia here could be due to the use of the same management recommended for pregestational diabetes during pregnancy, labor and delivery.

In our study, 42.0% of the babies were admitted to the NICU, compared to lower rates in other studies [7, 8]. In women with overt diabetes, rate was 24.3% [18], compared to 36.3% here. NICU admission was associated with maternal preeclampsia, with delivery of SGA or LGA babies, and also with a higher maternal third trimester HbA1c, highlighting the relevance of an adequate glycemic control throughout pregnancy.

Perinatal and neonatal death were associated with higher values of HbA1c at booking. An adverse intrauterine hyperglycemic milieu at conception and organogenesis period leads to a higher risk of congenital malformations, SGA babies, and perinatal death [15]. Death of SGA babies was more frequent here; congenital anomalies and fetal growth restriction might be the imputable factors [28].

In these women, several adverse pregnancy outcomes could have been avoided if they had been prepared to conceive. Preconception care was associated with substantial reduction in rates of congenital malformations and admission to NICU, independent of early prenatal care [15]. Adequate metabolic control, expressed by lower HbA1c values in early pregnancy, was also more frequent in women receiving preconception care. Nevertheless, even women with known diagnosis of diabetes arrived late to prenatal care and with higher than recommended HbA1c values. In most women, HbA1c decreased along pregnancy, reaching recommended values at delivery in 59.0% of women; despite this, at least one clinically relevant adverse outcome occurred in 41.9% of the neonates. A long road towards prioritizing the women’s health at childbearing age, especially during preconception and early pregnancy, is still ahead. And hyperglycemia undoubtedly contributes to an unhealthy intrauterine milieu.

To our knowledge, this is the first manuscript comparing, head-to-head, the pregnancy outcomes of women with known pregestational diabetes to those of women with overt diabetes, being this the main strength of the study. Other studies looked at these women´s pregnancies; in one, overt diabetes was diagnosed retrospectively [18]; in another, no direct comparisons were performed between the two groups [21]; most studies compared pregnancy outcomes of women with overt diabetes with those of women with gestational diabetes [29]. Other strength is the large number of women evaluated in the two major regional high-risk maternities. We disclosed a high frequency of overt diabetes, denoting women with unknown hyperglycemia at conception despite displaying several classic risk factors. We should promote actions for prompt diagnosis of these women before pregnancy, since they are at the same risk level of adverse pregnancy outcomes as women with known diabetes; and for sensitizing the primary care health team to educate women of childbearing age about the benefits of preconception care, especially in the presence of obesity or hyperglycemia.

Main limitations were due to retrospective and secondary data collection, despite all women had been prospectively followed by medical teams in the two maternities. Some risk factors were assumed as negative when not recorded in the hospital charts, thus potentially underestimating their impact. We used clinical features to label type 2 diabetes, despite the current trend to include genetic and metabolic testing to refine diabetes subtypes classification [30]. Therefore, women with MODY could had been labelled as having type 2 diabetes, since genetic tests were not available at the two hospitals. Of note, MODY accounts for only ~ 1.0% of the cases of diabetes and pregnancy [31]; therefore, the impact on results would be very small if we had to exclude such cases. Nearly 25% of women with pregestational diabetes used insulin, alone or in combination with oral medications, raising questions about whether some of them might be cases of LADA. Nevertheless, clinical features matched those of type 2 diabetes and we had excluded those suspected of having LADA. We also accepted diagnosis of preeclampsia, neonatal hypoglycemia and the criteria for admission to NICU as defined by the medical teams. Slight differences in diabetes management and outcomes definitions between the centers did not translate into different outcomes. Finally, although many women with overt diabetes might return to a normal glycemic condition after pregnancy [29], we could not fully reclassify their glycemic status after delivery; however, low return rates to retest for diabetes were previously reported [21].

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