Associations Between Preconception Glycemia and Preterm Birth

Citation

Delker, Erin; Bandoli, Gretchen; Ramos, Gladys A.; LaCoursiere, Yvette; Ferran, Karen; Gallo, Linda C.; Oren, Eyal; Gahagan, Sheila; & Allison, Matthew (2022). Associations Between Preconception Glycemia and Preterm Birth. Society of Maternal Fetal Medicine 2022 Annual Meeting. Virtual.

Abstract

Background: Preconception diabetes is strongly associated with adverse birth outcomes. Less is known about the effects of elevated glycemia at levels below clinical cutoffs for diabetes. In this study, we estimated associations between preconception diabetes, prediabetes, and hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) on the risk of preterm birth, and evaluated whether associations were modified by access to or utilization of health care services. Materials and Methods: We used data from Add Health, a US prospective cohort study with five study waves to date. At Wave IV (ages 24-32), glucose and HbA1c were measured. At Wave V (ages 32-42), women with a live birth reported whether the baby was born preterm. The analytic sample size was 1989. Results: The prevalence of preterm birth was 13%. Before pregnancy, 6.9% of women had diabetes, 23.7% had prediabetes, and 69.4% were normoglycemic. Compared to the normoglycemic group, women with diabetes had 2.1 (confidence interval [95% CI]: 1.5-2.9) times the risk of preterm birth, while women with prediabetes had 1.3 (95% CI: 1.0, 1.7) times the risk of preterm birth. There was a nonlinear relationship between HbA1c and preterm birth such that risk of preterm birth emerged after HbA1c = 5.7%, a standard cutoff for prediabetes. The excess risks of preterm birth associated with elevated HbA1c were four to five times larger among women who reported unstable health care coverage and among women who used the emergency room as usual source of care. Conclusion: Our findings replicate prior research showing strong associations between preconception diabetes and preterm birth, adding that prediabetes is also associated with higher risk. Policies and interventions to enhance access and utilization of health care among women before pregnancy should be examined.

URL

https://www.smfm.org/meetings/8-smfms-42nd-annual-pregnancy-meeting

Keyword(s)

diabetes;

Notes

Abstract retrieved from Journal of Women's Health

Reference Type

Conference proceeding

Book Title

Society of Maternal Fetal Medicine 2022 Annual Meeting

Author(s)

Delker, Erin
Bandoli, Gretchen
Ramos, Gladys A.
LaCoursiere, Yvette
Ferran, Karen
Gallo, Linda C.
Oren, Eyal
Gahagan, Sheila
Allison, Matthew

Year Published

2022

City of Publication

Virtual

DOI

10.1089/jwh.2022.0256

Reference ID

10245