A 16-yr prospective study of 615 gestational diabetic subjects, half of whom were randomly assigned to insulin therapy during pregnancy, is evaluated to report on the potential reduction in subsequent diabetes due to insulin therapy. No such difference in incidence rates was observed between the two groups. In the subsets of women managed with insulin who bore a baby of large birthweight or who had a family history of diabetes, subsequent decompensated diabetes was found to be significantly reduced. Both life table and multivariate analyses to adjust for the effects of age, weight, level of blood glucose at selection, duration of follow-up, and other potentially confounding covariables confirmed this conclusion. The finding suggests the possibility of long-term preventive benefits from insulin treatment in high risk subsets of women with gestational diabetes.
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Session IV. Effects of Intervention in Gestational Diabetes|
May 01 1980
Insulin Treatment and High Risk Groups
John B O'Sullivan;
John B O'Sullivan
Department of Medicine, Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology Section, Boston University School of Medicine, and the Public Health Program, Civil Engineering Department
Tufts University
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Clare M Mahan
Clare M Mahan
Department of Medicine, Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology Section, Boston University School of Medicine, and the Public Health Program, Civil Engineering Department
Tufts University
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Address reprint requests to John B. O'Sullivan, 408 Atlantic Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.
Citation
John B O'Sullivan, Clare M Mahan; Insulin Treatment and High Risk Groups. Diabetes Care 1 May 1980; 3 (3): 482–485. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.3.3.482
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