Abstract

The aim of the present study was to identify the factors associated with non-attendance of immediate postpartum glucose test using a machine learning algorithm following gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) pregnancy. A retrospective cohort study of all GDM women (n = 607) for postpartum glucose test due between January 2016 and December 2019 at the George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust, UK. Sixty-five percent of women attended postpartum glucose test. Type 2 diabetes was diagnosed in 2.8% and 21.6% had persistent dysglycaemia at 6-13 weeks post-delivery. Those who did not attend postpartum glucose test seem to be younger, multiparous, obese, and continued to smoke during pregnancy. They also had higher fasting glucose at antenatal oral glucose tolerance test. Our machine learning algorithm predicted postpartum glucose non-attendance with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.72. The model could achieve a sensitivity of 70% with 66% specificity at a risk score threshold of 0.46. A total of 233 (38.4%) women attended subsequent glucose test at least once within the first two years of delivery and 24% had dysglycaemia. Compared to women who attended postpartum glucose test, those who did not attend had higher conversion rate to type 2 diabetes (2.5% vs 11.4%; p = 0.005). Postpartum screening following GDM is still poor. Women who did not attend postpartum screening appear to have higher metabolic risk and higher conversion to type 2 diabetes by two years post-delivery. Machine learning model can predict women who are unlikely to attend postpartum glucose test using simple antenatal factors. Enhanced, personalised education of these women may improve postpartum glucose screening.

Highlights

  • Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is associated with adverse maternal and offspring outcomes both in the short and long-term

  • Type 2 diabetes was diagnosed in 2.8% and 21.6% had persistent dysglycaemia at 6–13 weeks post-delivery

  • The model could achieve a sensitivity of 70% with 66% specificity at a risk score threshold of 0.46

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Summary

Introduction

Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is associated with adverse maternal and offspring outcomes both in the short and long-term. Incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) in women with history of GDM using real-world data can be 20-fold higher [1]. The conversion to T2D following the pregnancy seems to happen early in the postpartum period with highest risk within 3–6 years of index pregnancy; by 10–14 years, 50% of women have dysglycaemia [2, 3]. GDM is associated with at least two-fold greater risk for developing hypertension and cardiovascular disease (CVD) [1, 4]. This highlights the importance of early identification of women at risk to implement any preventive strategies [5, 6]. Most international guidelines recommend 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) or HbA1c for all GDM women in the postpartum period, and at least once every 1–3 years [7, 8]

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