Abstract

BackgroundGlyburide has replaced insulin as the first line of therapy in the treatment of gestational diabetes in the United States. Glyburide and metformin therapies were reported to be comparable to insulin yet also cost-effective, patient-friendly, and potentially compliance-enhancing. Recently, the efficacy of the use of these oral hypoglycemic drugs has been questioned. In this review, the questionable concerns will be addressed: Which diabetic drug(s) cross the placenta? What is the quality of evidence and the data source validity? Which treatment modalities are most effective in reducing the primary outcome in GDM? Which drug is most effective in improving secondary outcomes?FindingsThis review documents the methodological issues in study design that have impacted the results for the provision of health care interventions in GDM. The review summarizes the contents of the articles qualitatively and assesses the theoretical and empirical evidence. Multiple types of studies exist and every study design serves a specific purpose. Different study designs addressing the same question can yield varying results. The risk of presenting uncertain results without categorically knowing the direction and magnitude of the effect holds true for both randomized and nonrandomized controlled trials. The review further emphasizes the importance of achieving the targeted levels of glycemic control.ConclusionThe implications of this review are critical to addressing the current gaps in the literature on the efficacy of the use of oral hypoglycemic agents in GDM. The emphasis needs to be placed on patient treatment in order to manage hyperglycemia to reduce fetal and maternal morbidity. In this regard, we need to delineate proper outcome criteria that will reflect disease severity and treat using appropriate pharmacological therapy.

Highlights

  • The implications of this review are critical to addressing the current gaps in the literature on the efficacy of the use of oral hypoglycemic agents in gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM)

  • The emphasis needs to be placed on patient treatment in order to manage hyperglycemia to reduce fetal and maternal morbidity

  • The time has come to place the emphasis on patient treatment of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) in order to manage hyperglycemia to reduce fetal and maternal morbidity rather than debating the diagnostic criteria

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Summary

Conclusion

We need to delineate proper outcome criteria that will reflect disease severity and treat using appropriate pharmacological therapy

Introduction
Findings
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