Abstract
BackgroundGestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a common pregnancy complication associated with adverse outcomes including preeclampsia, caesarean section, macrosomia, neonatal morbidity and future development of type 2 diabetes in both mother and child. Current selective screening strategies rely on clinical risk factors such as age, family history of diabetes, macrosomia or GDM in a previous pregnancy, and they possess a relatively low specificity. Here we hypothesize that novel first trimester protein predictors of GDM can contribute to the current selective screening strategies for early and accurate prediction of GDM, thus allowing for timely interventions.MethodsA proteomics discovery approach was applied to first trimester sera from obese (BMI ≥27 kg/m2) women (n = 60) in a nested case-control study design, utilizing tandem mass tag labelling and tandem mass spectrometry. A subset of the identified protein markers was further validated in a second set of serum samples (n = 210) and evaluated for their contribution as predictors of GDM in relation to the maternal risk factors, by use of logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic analysis.ResultsSerum proteomic profiling identified 25 proteins with significantly different levels between cases and controls. Three proteins; afamin, serum amyloid P-component and vitronectin could be further confirmed as predictors of GDM in a validation set. Vitronectin was shown to contribute significantly to the predictive power of the maternal risk factors, indicating it as a novel independent predictor of GDM.ConclusionsCurrent selective screening strategies can potentially be improved by addition of protein predictors.
Highlights
Three proteins; afamin, serum amyloid P-component and vitronectin could be further confirmed as predictors of Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) in a validation set
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), defined as glucose intolerance diagnosed during pregnancy, is a common complication of pregnancy associated with preeclampsia, caesarean section, macrosomia, neonatal morbidity and future development of type 2 diabetes (T2D) in both mother and child [1,2,3,4]
A selected number of potential markers was further measured in a second set of samples and evaluated for their individual contributions as predictors of GDM when combined with maternal risk factors
Summary
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a common pregnancy complication associated with adverse outcomes including preeclampsia, caesarean section, macrosomia, neonatal morbidity and future development of type 2 diabetes in both mother and child. Current selective screening strategies rely on clinical risk factors such as age, family history of diabetes, macrosomia or GDM in a previous pregnancy, and they possess a relatively low specificity. We hypothesize that novel first trimester protein predictors of GDM can contribute to the current selective screening strategies for early and accurate prediction of GDM, allowing for timely interventions
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