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An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa

Background: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) poses substantial risks to both mothers and their offspring. In South Africa, screening practices vary, and pregnant women are not screened universally due to resource constraints. This study investigates the implications of using point of-care (POC) c...

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Main Author: Mennen, Mathilda
Other Authors: Madlala, Hlengiwe
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Health and Family Medicine 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mennen, Mathilda
author2 Madlala, Hlengiwe
author_browse Madlala, Hlengiwe
Mennen, Mathilda
author_facet Madlala, Hlengiwe
Mennen, Mathilda
author_sort Mennen, Mathilda
collection Thesis
description Background: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) poses substantial risks to both mothers and their offspring. In South Africa, screening practices vary, and pregnant women are not screened universally due to resource constraints. This study investigates the implications of using point of-care (POC) capillary glucose measures for GDM screening and explores potential strategies to increase screening capacity by eliminating the reliance on central laboratory facilities or reducing the time spent at antenatal facilities for mothers. Objectives: The prevalence of GDM determined by venous blood glucose (VBG) measures obtained during 2-hour oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTTs) was compared to POC capillary glucose (CBG) tests with immediate results. The agreement between VBG and CBG measures was calculated across the whole cohort and in sub-groups, and the clinical and cost implications of each method explored. Methods: A secondary analysis was conducted on data collected from 400 pregnant participants who were enrolled at 24-28 weeks' gestation into a prospective cohort study at an antenatal clinic in Cape Town. Participants were screened for GDM using a gold-standard 75g OGTT and simultaneously underwent POC capillary glucose testing. GDM was diagnosed via each method according to the International Association of Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups (IADPSG) criteria. We calculated the sensitivity and specificity of CBG in detecting VBG-defined GDM at different thresholds and Bland-Altman analyses examined agreement between CBG and VBG. Results: The GDM prevalence was 7% among all participants, resulting from a prevalence of 6% among patients with no risk factors, and 8% among patients with risk factors. Four percent of the cohort was diagnosed with GDM despite having no risk factors. Most cases (96%) were diagnosed on fasting venous measures. Capillary measures overestimated the prevalence of GDM at IADPSG thresholds (25%) and had poor sensitivity (73%). Correlation between venous and capillary measures was lowest in the fasting state (r=0.22, p<0.001). Bland Altman analyses found the average agreement between methods to be lowest in the fasting state. 2 Conclusion: Capillary measures demonstrate poor correlation and agreement with venous measures at 24-28 weeks' gestation, particularly in the fasting state when almost all GDM cases are diagnosed. A fasting plasma glucose, if performed universally as a single measure, outperforms selective risk factor-based OGTT screening and fasting capillary blood glucose in terms of sensitivity and specificity, while reducing the overall number of laboratory-dependent glucose tests performed.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41076 An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa Mennen, Mathilda Madlala, Hlengiwe Myer Benjamin public health Background: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) poses substantial risks to both mothers and their offspring. In South Africa, screening practices vary, and pregnant women are not screened universally due to resource constraints. This study investigates the implications of using point of-care (POC) capillary glucose measures for GDM screening and explores potential strategies to increase screening capacity by eliminating the reliance on central laboratory facilities or reducing the time spent at antenatal facilities for mothers. Objectives: The prevalence of GDM determined by venous blood glucose (VBG) measures obtained during 2-hour oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTTs) was compared to POC capillary glucose (CBG) tests with immediate results. The agreement between VBG and CBG measures was calculated across the whole cohort and in sub-groups, and the clinical and cost implications of each method explored. Methods: A secondary analysis was conducted on data collected from 400 pregnant participants who were enrolled at 24-28 weeks' gestation into a prospective cohort study at an antenatal clinic in Cape Town. Participants were screened for GDM using a gold-standard 75g OGTT and simultaneously underwent POC capillary glucose testing. GDM was diagnosed via each method according to the International Association of Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups (IADPSG) criteria. We calculated the sensitivity and specificity of CBG in detecting VBG-defined GDM at different thresholds and Bland-Altman analyses examined agreement between CBG and VBG. Results: The GDM prevalence was 7% among all participants, resulting from a prevalence of 6% among patients with no risk factors, and 8% among patients with risk factors. Four percent of the cohort was diagnosed with GDM despite having no risk factors. Most cases (96%) were diagnosed on fasting venous measures. Capillary measures overestimated the prevalence of GDM at IADPSG thresholds (25%) and had poor sensitivity (73%). Correlation between venous and capillary measures was lowest in the fasting state (r=0.22, p<0.001). Bland Altman analyses found the average agreement between methods to be lowest in the fasting state. 2 Conclusion: Capillary measures demonstrate poor correlation and agreement with venous measures at 24-28 weeks' gestation, particularly in the fasting state when almost all GDM cases are diagnosed. A fasting plasma glucose, if performed universally as a single measure, outperforms selective risk factor-based OGTT screening and fasting capillary blood glucose in terms of sensitivity and specificity, while reducing the overall number of laboratory-dependent glucose tests performed. 2025-03-03T13:20:26Z 2025-03-03T13:20:26Z 2024 2025-03-03T10:08:28Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPH http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41076 eng application/pdf Department of Public Health and Family Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle public health
Mennen, Mathilda
An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa
title_full An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa
title_fullStr An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa
title_short An Evaluation of Diagnostic Approaches for Gestational Diabetes Screening in South Africa
title_sort evaluation of diagnostic approaches for gestational diabetes screening in south africa
topic public health
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41076
work_keys_str_mv AT mennenmathilda anevaluationofdiagnosticapproachesforgestationaldiabetesscreeninginsouthafrica
AT mennenmathilda evaluationofdiagnosticapproachesforgestationaldiabetesscreeninginsouthafrica