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<Articles><Article><Journal><PublisherName></PublisherName><JournalTitle>Journal of Diabetes and Metabolic Disorders</JournalTitle><Volume>2</Volume><Issue>0</Issue></Journal><ArticleTitle>SELECTIVE SCREENING FOR GESTATIONAL DIABETES MELLITUS IN BUSHEHR, BASED ON A 50-GRAM CLUCOSE CHALLENGE TEST.</ArticleTitle><FirstPage>35</FirstPage><LastPage>35</LastPage><AuthorList><Author><FirstName>Fariba</FirstName><LastName>KARIMI</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Iraj</FirstName><LastName>NABIPOOR</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Mojtaba</FirstName><LastName>JAAFARI</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Farkhondeh</FirstName><LastName>GHOLAMZADEH</LastName></Author></AuthorList><History><PubDate PubStatus="received"><Year>2015</Year><Month>10</Month><Day>05</Day></PubDate></History><Abstract>Background: The American Diabetes Association in 1997 switched its recommendations regarding the screening of pregnant women from universal to risk factor-based screening.&amp;nbsp; The ADA specifically recommended that screening is not cost-beneficial in women under the age of 25, with a normal weight and negative family history of diabetes.
Methods: 910 pregnant women attending the diabetes clinic at Bushehr University of Medical Sciences were screening for gestational diabetes using a 50-gram glucose challenge test.&amp;nbsp; All the women were 24-28 weeks pregnant at the time of testing.&amp;nbsp; Women with a post-load blood glucose of &amp;ge;140mg/dl were referred for a 3-hour oral glucose tolerance test.&amp;nbsp; The presence of ADA risk factors was recorded, as was the absence of all three risk factors, and compared with the results of 50-gram GCT.&amp;nbsp; We evaluated the predictive value of different combinations of risk factors relative to the results of screening.
Results: 66 women (6.9%) had a positive screening test, with 16 (1.75%) eventually diagnosed with GDM based on OGTT results.&amp;nbsp; GCT was negative in 616 (95.3%) women, who had at least one of the three risk factors - age &amp;gt;25 years, BMI &amp;ge;27kg/m2, or a positive family history of diabetes - and in 231 (27.3%) women who had none of these risk factors [odds ratio = 70.3, 95%-CI = 2.23-22.21; p&amp;lt;0.0001].
Conclusion: Selective screening of pregnant women will detect most cases of gestational diabetes where resources to implement universal screening are limited.&amp;nbsp; The most important factors in selecting screening candidates are age, body mass index, and family history of diabetes mellitus.</Abstract><web_url>https://jdmd.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jdmd/article/view/35</web_url></Article></Articles>
