It has been reported that the congenital anomalies frequently observed in offspring of diabetic women may be predicted by first-trimester ultrasound findings that reveal diminution in growth of the embryo/fetus. The aim of the current study was to examine the relationship between early growth delay and congenital anomalies in pregnancies complicated by diabetes. We conducted a retrospective study of 38 patients with insulin-requiring pregestational diabetes mellitus and 81 control pregnancies who had first-trimester ultrasound examinations. A cross-sectional survey of all patients revealed a congenital anomaly rate of 18.4% among the diabetic pregnancies compared to 4.9% among controls (P < 0.02). Early fetal growth delay was defined as a difference of six or more days between the menstrual gestational age and the sonographic gestational age (menstrual age minus ultrasound age). Early growth delay was exhibited in fifteen control pregnancies (18.5%) and eleven insulin-requiring pregestational diabetic pregnancies (28.9%) (P = 0.02). However the incidence of congenital anomalies in these two groups was significantly different, but there was no difference between groups with and without growth delay. The longitudinal growth of two anomalous fetuses of the diabetic group and three anomalous fetuses from the control group was studied. Both groups of fetuses remained within the normal growth range for their respective groups. This study described herein fails to confirm the association of early fetal growth delay with the occurrence of congenital malformations in insulin-requiring pregestational diabetic pregnancies.