During the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, the Japanese Society of Diabetes and Pregnancy proposed the use of random plasma glucose and glycated hemoglobin measured 1 month after delivery combined with pre-pregnancy body mass index to detect postpartum glucose intolerance instead of carrying out the oral glucose tolerance test in women with gestational diabetes. We retrospectively evaluated the clinical utility of this strategy to detect postpartum glucose intolerance evaluated by the oral glucose tolerance test after delivery. A total of 275 Japanese women with gestational diabetes were included in the present study. The specificity of 1-month postpartum random plasma glucose and glycated hemoglobin combined with pre-pregnancy body mass index to predict postpartum glucose intolerance was 98.0%, with a negative predictive value of 72.6%. However, sensitivity was 6.4%, with a positive predictive value of 55.6%. In conclusion, this Japanese Society of Diabetes and Pregnancy strategy showed high specificity, but low sensitivity, for detecting glucose intolerance postpartum.
CITATION STYLE
Sugiyama, K., Saisho, Y., Kasuga, Y., Ochiai, D., & Itoh, H. (2021). Clinical utility of 1-month postpartum random plasma glucose and glycated hemoglobin combined with pre-pregnancy body mass index for detecting postpartum glucose intolerance in Japanese women with gestational diabetes. Journal of Diabetes Investigation, 12(12), 2242–2246. https://doi.org/10.1111/jdi.13612
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