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Preconception care for diabetic women for improving maternal and infant health

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Abstract

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Background

Infants born to mothers with pre‐existing type I or type II diabetes mellitus are at greater risk of congenital anomalies, perinatal mortality and significant morbidity in the short and long term. Pregnant women with pre‐existing diabetes are at greater risk of perinatal morbidity and diabetic complications. The relationship between glycaemic control and health outcomes for both mothers and infants indicates the potential for preconception care for these women to be of benefit.

Objectives

To assess the effects of preconception care in women with pre‐existing diabetes on health outcomes for mother and baby.

Search methods

We searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group's Trials Register was searched (30 April 2010) and reference lists of retrieved articles.

Selection criteria

Randomised, quasi‐randomised and cluster‐randomised trials evaluating preconception care of diabetic women.

Data collection and analysis

Two review authors independently conducted data extraction and quality assessment. We resolved disagreements through discussion or through a third author.

Main results

We included one trial (involving 53 women) in this review. The trial did not report on the prespecified outcomes of this review.

Authors' conclusions

Little evidence is available to recommend for or against preconception care for women with pre‐existing diabetes. Further large, high‐quality randomised controlled trials are needed to evaluate the effect of different protocols of preconception care for women with pre‐existing diabetes.

PICOs

Population
Intervention
Comparison
Outcome

The PICO model is widely used and taught in evidence-based health care as a strategy for formulating questions and search strategies and for characterizing clinical studies or meta-analyses. PICO stands for four different potential components of a clinical question: Patient, Population or Problem; Intervention; Comparison; Outcome.

See more on using PICO in the Cochrane Handbook.

Plain language summary

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Preconception care for diabetic women to improve maternal and infant health

Current guidelines in many countries including Australia, the United Kingdom and United States recommend preconception care of diabetic women. Pregnant women with type I or type II diabetes are at a greater risk of adverse outcomes in pregnancy such as high blood pressure (gestational hypertension) and preterm births. Pregnancy can also accelerate the development of diabetic complications (retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral vascular disease). Babies born to mothers with type I or type II diabetes diagnosed before pregnancy may be larger and are at greater risk of infant death and congenital abnormality (such as neural tube defects including anencephaly and spina bifida). These infants are also at risk of developing type II diabetes in the long term. Because of the strong association between good control of a woman’s blood sugars (glycaemic control), as measured by haemoglobin A1c, and reduced congenital anomalies, glycaemic targets are central to preconception care.

This review evaluating preconception care management protocols for women with pre‐existing diabetes identified only one trial (involving 53 women) that was eligible for inclusion. None of the prespecified outcomes of the review were reported by this trial. Haemoglobin A1c data were reported as mean changes from baseline and could not be included in this review. Therefore, it is unclear what effect preconception care for diabetic women has on maternal and infant health outcomes based on evidence from randomised controlled trials.