Abstract

Several experimental studies have suggested that vitamin C (vitC) deficiency during pregnancy may be detrimental to fetal development, and observational studies have shown that vitC status is lower during pregnancy and in people with diabetes. A cross-sectional study in pregnant type 1 diabetic women found that poor maternal vitC status was a significant predictor for obstetric complications of pregnancy when measured within four weeks before labor. The plasma vitC concentration was significantly negatively correlated to HbA1c, the biomarker of glycemic control well-known to be associated with the outcome of the diabetic pregnancy. Here, we evaluated HbA1c during pregnancy in relation to the measured vitC levels in late pregnancy based on data from 46 women from the same cohort. Regression analysis showed that HbA1c of first trimester, the combined mean HbA1c of first and second trimester, mean HbA1c of the whole pregnancy (first, second and third trimester combined), and HbA1c of third trimester alone were all associated with vitC in late pregnancy (p = 0.03, n = 45; p = 0.034, n = 43; p = 0.017, n = 42; and p = 0.008, n = 46, respectively). In third trimester, when adjusted for creatinine clearance, the association between vitC and HbA1c persisted (p = 0.029). Women in third trimester with HbA1c above 7.0% had an increased risk of having poor vitC status compared to women with HbA1c below this level (11 out of 21 vs. 2 out of 25 women, p < 0.001). The results suggest that high HbA1c is associated with poor maternal vitC status and potentially inadequate supply of vitC for the neonate. HbA1c may thus be a relevant substitute biomarker for identifying pregnant women who might benefit from vitC supplementation.

Highlights

  • In type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), vitamin C levels are significantly lower than in non-diabetic subjects [1,2]

  • Poor vitamin C (vitC) status defined as a plasma vitC concentration < 23 μmol/L [6] was found in 51% of the diabetic women at some stage during pregnancy [3]

  • We found that vitC status in late pregnancy was significantly negatively correlated to the level of glycemic control as measured by HbA1c, a relationship that has not previously been described in the literature [7]

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Summary

Introduction

In type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), vitamin C (vitC) levels are significantly lower than in non-diabetic subjects [1,2]. As recently reported by us, this seems to be the case in the diabetic pregnancy [3]. We found even lower plasma vitC concentrations than in non-pregnant T1DM patients [4], probably owing the well-known preferential placental transport of vitC and rapid fetal growth that tends to lower the maternal vitC status during pregnancy per se [5]. Poor vitC status defined as a plasma vitC concentration < 23 μmol/L [6] was found in 51% of the diabetic women at some stage during pregnancy [3]. We found that vitC status in late pregnancy was significantly negatively correlated to the level of glycemic control as measured by HbA1c, a relationship that has not previously been described in the literature [7].

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