Diagnostic criteria for diabetes mellitus (DM) and impaired glucose tolerance from oral glucose tolerance test results in adults are reviewed in the epidemiological context, highlighting the residual differences between World Health Organization (WHO) and National Diabetes Data Group (NDDG) glycemie criteria with respect to the diagnosis of gestational diabetes. Although the value of the diagnosis of DM (WHO/NDDG criteria) in pregnancy is not called into question, attention is drawn to the paucity of evidence linking lesser degrees of glucose intolerance with significant disturbance of pregnancy outcome when confounding variables such as maternal age, adiposity, and parity are allowed for. It is in the area of the detection and treatment of these lesser degrees of glucose intolerance in pregnancy that serious questions of the detriment-to-benefit ratio arise. A population-based multiethnic multicultural inquiry into diagnostic methodology and criteria in pregnancy is proposed, jointly sponsored by the WHO and the International Diabetes Federation, extending, if possible, to a controlled clinical trial of the effects of intervention.
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December 01 1991
Gestational Diabetes: Can Epidemiology Help?
Harry Keen
Harry Keen
United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy's and St. Thomas's Hospitals, University of London
London, United Kingdom
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Harry Keen, MD, FRCP, Unit for Metabolic Medicine, 4th Floor, Hunt's House, Guy's Hospital, London SE1 9RT, UK
Citation
Harry Keen; Gestational Diabetes: Can Epidemiology Help?. Diabetes 1 December 1991; 40 (Supplement_2): 3–7. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.40.2.S3
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