Abstract

BackgroundWith the increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in young adulthood, treatment of diabetes in pregnancy faces new challenges. Anti-diabetic drug utilization patterns of pregnant women with pre-existing diabetes are poorly described. We aim to describe anti-diabetic (AD) agent utilization among diabetic pregnant women.MethodsWe utilized IMS LifeLink, including administrative claims data of patients in US managed care plans, to establish a retrospective cohort of women, age 18–46 years (N = 96,740) with billed procedures for a live birth, and a 12 month eligibility period before and 3 month after delivery. Diabetes mellitus was identified from ≥2 in- or outpatient claims with diagnoses (ICD-9-CM 250.XX) before pregnancy. We estimated the prevalence of AD drugs before, during and after pregnancy, and secular trends across the study period (1999–2009), using linear regression. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to identify the extent of misclassification of trimesters.ResultsAlmost six percent (n = 5,581) of the live birth cohort had diabetes mellitus. Throughout the study, 48% (1999) and 78% (2009) (p < 0.0001) of diabetic women received AD drugs during pregnancy. The most common AD drugs during pregnancy were insulin, metformin, sulfonylureas, thiazolidinediones (TZD), and combination AD. The annual prevalence of insulin use increased by only 1% from 39% (1999) to 40% (2009) (p = 0.589) during pregnancy, while use of sulfonylureas and metformin increased from 2.5% and 4.2% (1999) to 17.3% and 15.3% (2009) (p < 0.0001), respectively. Insulin and sulfonylurea use steadily increased in prevalence from the 1st to 3rd trimester (16.5% and 3.3% to 33.0% and 7.5%), while metformin and TZD use decreased (11.4% and 1.6% to 3.8% and 0.2%).ConclusionsAD use during pregnancy demonstrates the need for additional investigation regarding safety and efficacy of AD drugs on maternal outcomes.

Highlights

  • With the increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in young adulthood, treatment of diabetes in pregnancy faces new challenges

  • In 2010, approximately 11% of United States (US) women aged 20 years or older were either diagnosed or had undiagnosed diabetes [1]. This reflects an increase in diabetes prevalence of 2% in this age group over the last five years, with a corresponding 1.9 million new cases of diabetes diagnosed in 2010 [1]

  • Given the limited research that is available on anti-diabetic agent use during pregnancy, we aimed to describe anti-diabetic agent utilization before, during and after pregnancy and determine secular trends among classes of anti-diabetic drugs across the 10-year study period (1999–2009) in women with pre-existing diabetes

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Summary

Introduction

With the increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in young adulthood, treatment of diabetes in pregnancy faces new challenges. This reflects an increase in diabetes prevalence of 2% in this age group over the last five years, with a corresponding 1.9 million new cases of diabetes diagnosed in 2010 [1] This growth is almost exclusively attributable to type 2 diabetes mellitus, which traditionally has had its onset in later stages of adulthood [1,2]. The growing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in young adults is important, as more young women will be diagnosed during reproductive years [2]. Controlled diabetes both before and during the first trimester of pregnancy can cause major birth defects, spontaneous abortions, and stillbirths [2]. Little experience and evidence regarding the safety and effectiveness of oral agents during pregnancy exists

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