Using fasting plasma glucose concentrations to screen for gestational diabetes mellitus: prospective population based study
BMJ 1999; 319 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.319.7213.812 (Published 25 September 1999) Cite this as: BMJ 1999;319:812- Daniele Perucchini, senior registrar in obstetricsa,
- Ursin Fischer, general practitionera,
- Giatgen A Spinas, professor of medicineb,
- Renate Huch, professor of obstetricsa,
- Albert Huch, professor of obstetricsa,
- Roger Lehmann, senior registrar in diabetology (Roger.Lehmann{at}dim.usz.ch)b
- a Departments of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University Hospital Zurich, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland
- b Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Diabetes, University Hospital Zurich
- Correspondence to: R Lehmann
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether measuring fasting plasma glucose concentration is an easier screening procedure for gestational diabetes mellitus than the 1 hour 50 g glucose challenge test.
Design: Prospective population based study.
Setting: Outpatient clinic in a university hospital.
Participants: 520 pregnant women (328 (63%) white, 99 (19%) Asian, 31 (6%) African, 62 (12%) others) with mean age 28.4 (SD 0.2; range 17-45) years. All underwent a glucose challenge test between the 24th and 28th gestational week, followed by a diagnostic 3 hour 100 g oral glucose tolerance test within one week. This was done irrespective of the result of the challenge test.
Main outcome measure: Receiver operating curves were used to determine the best cut off values for screening with fasting plasma glucose concentrations.
Results: Fasting plasma glucose concentration at a threshold value of 4.8 mmol/l and the glucose challenge test with a threshold value of 7.8 mmol/l yielded sensitivities of 81% and 59% respectively and specificities of 76% and 91% respectively. Measuring fasting plasma glucose concentration as a screening procedure required a diagnostic test in 30%, compared with 14% when the challenge test was used.
Conclusions: Measuring fasting plasma glucose concentrations using a cut off value of ≥4.8 mmol/l is an easier screening procedure for gestational diabetes than the 50 g glucose challenge test and allows 70% of women to avoid the challenge test.
Key messages
Identifying women susceptible to gestational diabetes is particularly important not only to prevent perinatal morbidity but also to improve long term outcomes for the mother and her child
Measuring fasting plasma glucose concentration is an easier screening procedure for gestational diabetes than the 1 hour 50 g glucose challenge test
With a threshold value of 4.8 mmol/l it yields a sensitivity of 81% and a specificity of 76%
Measuring fasting plasma glucose concentration allows 70% of women to avoid a glucose challenge test
Introduction
Gestational diabetes mellitus is a common medical complication and metabolic disorder in pregnancy, occurring in 1-14% of patients depending on the population described and the criteria used for diagnosis.1–4 It is associated with an increased incidence of fetal macrosomia, pre-eclampsia, and caesarean section in pregnancy.5 6 Type 2 diabetes develops in 30-50% of women with gestational diabetes who are followed up long term.7 8 Increasing pregnant women's carbohydrate intolerance is associated with a graded increase in adverse maternal and fetal outcomes.5 9 10 This was emphasised in the large blinded trial conducted by the Toronto tri-hospital gestational diabetes project. This trial showed an unequivocal graded relation between the fasting plasma glucose concentration (and other glucose concentrations at different time points during the oral glucose tolerance test) and a wide variety of adverse outcomes.5 Identifying women susceptible to gestational diabetes is particularly important not only to prevent perinatal morbidity but also to improve long term outcomes for the mother and her child.11–13 We aimed to evaluate whether measuring fasting plasma glucose concentration is an easier screening procedure for gestational diabetes than the 50 g glucose challenge test in a prospective, population based study, as previously suggested.14
Participants and methods
All pregnant women with a singleton pregnancy in the University Hospital Zurich (772, over a study period of 21 months, 1995-7) were eligible to participate in this prospective study. The only exceptions were women with pre-existing diabetes and those not examined by an obstetrician before the 24th gestational week. Only deliveries after the 28th week of gestation were included in the analysis. The study was approved by the hospital's ethics committee.
Participants' characteristics and risk factors
Obstetric history (including repeated abortion, gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia, macrosomic infant(s), and congenital anomalies), family history of diabetes, and weight before pregnancy were obtained from all patients. We assessed potential clinical risk factors—for example, smoking—that could adversely affect maternal and fetal outcome. Body mass index (weight(kg)/(height(m)2)) before pregnancy was calculated by using the most recent self reported weight before conception. Race information was categorised as white (European) (63%; 328), Asian (19%; 99), African (6%; 31), and others (12%; 62). The mean age of the 520 women included in the analysis was 28.4 (SD 0.2; range 17-45) years, and the mean body mass index was 23.8 (SD 0.2).
Glucose tolerance tests and diagnostic criteria
The women were given a standard, 1 hour, 50 g glucose challenge test between the 24th and 28th gestational week, with a venous plasma blood glucose measurement 1 hour later. The women had to record the time of last food intake, although the challenge was performed irrespective of this or of the time of day. Regardless of the results of the challenge, all patients were asked to return for a 3 hour, diagnostic, 100 g oral glucose tolerance test within the next week. The tolerance test was performed in the morning after a 12 hour overnight fast and 3 days of 150-200 g (minimum) carbohydrate diet. Gestational diabetes was diagnosed if two or more values of the tolerance test equalled or exceeded the thresholds proposed by Carpenter and Coustan and adopted by the fourth international workshop conference on gestational diabetes (table).3 15
Biochemical analysis
Venous plasma glucose concentration was determined by a hexokinase method (Hitachi 747, Hoffmann LaRoche, Basle, Switzerland).
Statistical analysis
Data were analysed with STATISTICA FOR WINDOWS software (Statsoft, 1997, Tulsa, Oklahoma). Relations among different groups and variables were analysed with the Student's t test and the Mann-Whitney U test where appropriate; P<0.05 was considered significant. Sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values were calculated using a 2×2 contingency table. Receiver operating curves were used to construct a graphic representation of the relation between sensitivity and specificity of a laboratory test over all possible diagnostic cutoff values.16–18
Results
Participants
Altogether, 558 (72.3%) of 772 eligible women gave informed oral consent to participate in the study. After the initial glucose challenge test the women proceeded with the diagnostic oral glucose tolerance test. Thirty eight (6.8%) women were excluded because of vomiting after the 100 g glucose intake (8 (1.4%)), protocol violation (for example, prior food intake, smoking, plasma glucose concentration measured too late; 18 (3.2%)), or incomplete data (for example, one or several glucose measurements missed, refusal to finish the tolerance test; 12 (2.2%)). The demographic characteristics of women who were excluded or not willing to participate in the study were not different from those of the study population
Prevalence of gestational diabetes
Gestational diabetes was diagnosed in 53 women (10.2%). The condition was slightly more prevalent in Asian (16% (16/99), P<0.05) or African women (13% (4/31), P=0.39) than in white women (8% (26/328)). As expected, women with the condition were older (>30 years: 77% v 46%; P<0.001) and more overweight (body mass index >25.0: 54% v 32%; P=0.001) than women with normal glucose tolerance.
Fasting plasma glucose concentrations
A detailed analysis using receiver operating curves showed that the best cut off value for using fasting plasma glucose concentration as a screening test for gestational diabetes was 4.8 mmol/l (figure). Universal screening using a threshold value for fasting plasma glucose of 4.8 mmol/l yielded a sensitivity of 81% and a specificity of 76%. Altogether, 30% (155) of women had a value ≥4.8 mmol/l and would have had to proceed with the tolerance test. Lowering the threshold value to 4.4 mmol/l would not have missed any case of gestational diabetes. The sensitivity for the 4.4 mmol/l threshold was 100%, the specificity 39%. If this threshold value were used, however, 55% (285/520) of all women tested would have been false positives and 65% (n=338) would have had to proceed with the tolerance test, compared with 22% false positive results if a cut off value of 4.8 mmol/l were used.
50 g glucose challenge test
Receiver operating curves were used for determination of the best cut off values in the glucose challenge test (figure). A cut off value of 7.8 mmol/l yielded a sensitivity of 59% and a specificity of 91%. A cut off value of 7.5 mmol/l, as used by several investigators, yielded a sensitivity of 61% and specificity of 88%. The best cut off value for the 50 g screening test in our analysis was 7.0 mmol/l (sensitivity 68%, specificity 82% (figure)). Thirty eight per cent (199) of the women reported food intake up to 1 hour before the challenge test, 32% (167) between 1 and 2 hours before, and 27% (141) >2 hours before; 13 women did not report the time of last food intake. Analysis of the data for the women with food intake > 2 hours before the challenge test suggested that the sensitivity of the challenge test can be improved by asking women to fast for 2 hours before (sensitivity 100%, specificity 71%, with a cut off value of 7.0 mmol/l).
Diagnostic 100 g oral glucose tolerance test
Forty six (8.9%) of all the women had a fasting plasma glucose concentration of ≥5.3 mmol/l, of whom 27 (5.2%) had been diagnosed with gestational diabetes. Seventy six (14.6%) women had a 1 hour value of ≥10.0 mmol/l, of whom 50 (9.6% of all) had gestational diabetes. Fifty two women (10%) had a 2 hour value of ≥8.6 mmol/l, of whom 39 (7.5%) had gestational diabetes. In 37 patients (7.1%) the condition was diagnosed by a raised 1 hour and 2 hour value—that is, 69.8% of women with gestational diabetes mellitus. The 3 hour value was above the threshold (≥7.8 mmol/l) in only 16 women (3.1% of all women), and gestational diabetes was diagnosed in 14 of them (2.3%). Four out of 53 (7.6%) cases of gestational diabetes would have been missed by omitting the 3 hour value from analysis, yielding a sensitivity of 92.4%.
Discussion
Although new diagnostic criteria for diabetes mellitus outside pregnancy have been adopted by the American Diabetes Association19 and the World Health Organisation,20 a consensus is still lacking on both diagnostic and screening criteria for gestational diabetes mellitus. The new criteria for diagnosis of diabetes outside pregnancy rely on fasting plasma glucose concentration 19 20 or the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test.20
Screening with plasma glucose concentrations
Using fasting plasma glucose concentration with a threshold value of 4.8 mmol/l yielded a 22% better sensitivity than the 50 g glucose challenge test with a threshold value of 7.8 mmol/l and an acceptable specificity (76% v 91%). The low sensitivity of the challenge test in our study might be explained by the fact that a high percentage of women reported food intake up to 2 hours before the test, which is known to reduce the test's sensitivity owing to the Staub-Traugott effect.21
Lowering the threshold value to 4.4 mmol/l, a value similar to the 4.1 mmol/l cut off point for referring women to the tolerance test as proposed by Mortensen et al,22 would not have missed any case of gestational diabetes in our study and had a sensitivity of 100%, but it had a low specificity (39%) and a very high percentage of false positive results (55%). The use of this threshold, therefore, would have required 65% of women to have a tolerance test. A drawback of the studies of Sacks et al14 and Mortensen et al22 lay in the selection criteria, which might have biased selection of patients towards those at increased risk of gestational diabetes Currently, only one large prospective trial evaluating the use of fasting plasma glucose concentrations to screen for gestational diabetes has been published.23 In that study, however, only 45% of the women studied were white, with most being of African (14%) or mixed ethnicity (41%), and the body mass index was higher than in our study. As the prevalence of gestational diabetes is influenced by ethnic background, obesity, and physical activity of a population, diagnostic threshold values and screening methods might have to be adjusted to the local community There are several reasons why using fasting plasma glucose concentration might be more robust and transferable to other populations. Firstly, the concentration is not influenced by gestational age in pregnancies with normal glucose tolerance, in contrast to the 1 or 2 hour plasma glucose after the oral tolerance test.24 Secondly, the concentration has a much lower variation and better reproducibility than postprandial values.25 Thirdly, the suggested threshold value of 4.8 mmol/l used in the present study is closely similar to the values for screening suggested by the studies of Sacks et al (4.7-4.9 mmol/l) and Reichelt et al (4.5-4.7 mmol/l) 14 23—these studies were conducted in populations with a different ethnic background (west coast United States and Brazil respectively).
Two step v one step screening procedure
The two step screening approach for gestational diabetes has often been criticised as being more cumbersome than the one step test. We propose universal screening for gestational diabetes using a fasting plasma glucose concentration of ≥4.8 mmol/l between the 24th and 28th gestational week as an easier screening procedure. Any woman with a concentration above the threshold can proceed directly to the diagnostic oral glucose tolerance test. In addition, the 3 hour value can be omitted with a relatively small loss of sensitivity, as recently proposed for the 75 g diagnostic oral tolerance test.3 Our data confirm the validity of this recommendation also for the 100 g diagnostic oral tolerance test. Our proposed screening procedure, based on using fasting plasma glucose concentration and, if necessary, the diagnostic test, would be, therefore, a 2 hour, one step procedure, comparable to the 2 hour oral tolerance test as proposed by the World Health Organisation (table) With the fasting plasma glucose as a screening procedure, 30% of women have to be referred for the oral tolerance test, compared with 14% of those screened with the 50 g challenge test with a cut off value of 7.8 mmol/l. The higher rate of oral tolerance tests associated with screening with fasting plasma glucose concentration is more than compensated for by the avoidance of the challenge test in all the patients.
Acknowledgments
Contributors: RL had the original idea for the study, designed the protocol, performed most of literature searches, discussed core ideas about the study design, interpreted the results, and wrote the paper. DP participated in the design of the protocol, performed literature searches, supervised patient management, discussed core ideas about the study design, and participated in data analysis and interpretation of the results. UF collected and analysed the clinical data and performed the statistical analysis. GAS participated in the design of the study, discussed core ideas of the paper, and edited the paper. RH discussed core ideas of the paper and edited the paper. AH obtained the funding and discussed core ideas of the paper. RL is the guarantor for the paper.
Footnotes
-
Funding University Hospital Zurich.
-
Competing interests None declared.