ABSTRACT
Infant macrosomia is a serious medical concern. Pregnant women who do not meet the
specific diagnosis for gestational diabetes may still have glucose-mediated macrosomia.
In Santa Barbara County all pregnant women are screened for gestational diabetes at
24-28 weeks with a 50-g, 1-hr glucose challenge test (GCT). All patients who fail
this test are placed on a standard euglycemic diet (40% carbohydrate, 20% protein,
40% fat) and perform home glucose monitoring of fasting and postprandial glucose levels.
The objective of this study was to examine the effectiveness of this treatment program
in decreasing infant macrosomia, maternal and infant morbidity, maternal complications,
and operative delivery. We studied 103 women who had a positive GCT, but a negative
100-g, 3-hr oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). The women were randomly assigned to
either experimental or control groups with experimental women receiving dietary counseling
and home glucose monitoring instruction (HBGM). HBGM diaries were reviewed weekly
by clinic nurses. All women had hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) tests at 28 and 32 weeks. Maternal and fetal charts were reviewed to determine delivery
type and complications, indications for cesarean section (C-section), and infant gestational
age, gender, Apgar scores, birth weight, morbidities, and congenital anomalies. Of
the 103 women, 5 women required insulin treatment, 1 woman had an abortion, and 14
women were indeterminate regarding compliance or were control women who received diet
counseling and HBGM. The results are based on 83 women-48 control and 35 experimental.
There were no significant differences between the groups for age, parity, or weight
at 28-30 weeks or 37 weeks to delivery, or HbA1c at 28 weeks. HbA1c was significantly higher in control women at 32 weeks. Birth weight expressed in
grams or as a percentile specific for gender, ethnicity, and gestational age was significantly
higher in control infants. Birth weight was significantly correlated with maternal
intake weight, weight at 28-30 weeks, and weight at delivery and with HbA1c at 32 weeks' gestation. There were no significant differences between groups for
maternal complications. Groups were significantly different for mode of delivery with
experimental women having more induced vaginal deliveries but fewer repeat C-sections
than control women. Groups were not different for primary C-sections. Women who fail
the GCT, but not the OGTT and thus do not receive the diagnosis of GDM are still at
risk for delivering a macrosomic infant and operative delivery. Our program of treatment
for all women who fail the GCT improves outcome by reducing infant birth weight and
the number of cesarean sections.
Keywords
Gestational diabetes mellitus - glucose intolerance - impaired glucose tolerance -
macrosomia