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Endocrine Abstracts (2013) 32 P416 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.32.P416

ECE2013 Poster Presentations Diabetes (151 abstracts)

Lower incidence of severe hypoglycaemia during pregnancy in a recent cohort of women with type 1 diabetes followed in a routine care setting

Lene Ringholm 1, , Anna Lilja Secher 1, , Ulrik Pedersen-Bjergaard 3 , Birger Thorsteinsson 3, , Henrik Ullits Andersen 5 , Peter Damm 1, & Elisabeth R Mathiesen 1,


1Center for Pregnant Women with Diabetes, Rigshospitalet, University Hospital of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; 2Department of Endocrinology, Rigshospitalet, University Hospital of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; 3Endocrinology Section, Department of Cardiology, Endocrinology and Nephrology, Hillerød Hospital, Hillerød, Denmark; 4Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; 5Steno Diabetes Center, Gentofte, Denmark.


Introduction: To investigate whether the incidence of severe hypoglycaemia in pregnant women with type 1 diabetes can be reduced without deteriorating pregnancy outcomes in a routine care setting.

Methods/design: A new cohort (2009–2011) of 59 women receiving intensified education about the risk of severe hypoglycaemia in pregnancy was compared with an old cohort (2004–2006) of 108 women. The women entered the study at median 8 (range 5–13) weeks. Severe hypoglycaemia (requiring assistance from others) was prospectively reported in structured interviews.

Results: In the new vs old cohort HbA1c was comparable at inclusion (6.8% (5.6–10.7) vs 6.6% (4.9–10.5), P=0.25). During pregnancy severe hypoglycaemia occurred in 25% (n=15) vs 45% (n=49), P=0.01, corresponding to an incidence of 1.3 vs 2.5 events/patient-year, P=0.04. Repeated severe hypoglycaemia occurred in 7% (n=4) vs 31% (n=34), P=0.0003. At inclusion a higher proportion of women in the new vs old cohort were on insulin analogues (rapid-acting 100 vs 44%, P<0.0001; long-acting 53 vs 6%, P<0.0001) and insulin pumps (24 vs 5%, P=0.0002). Insulin dose at 8 weeks was lower in women on multiple daily injections in the new vs old cohort (0.67 IU/kg (0.3–1.4) vs 0.77 (0.4–1.7), P=0.02) and similar in women on insulin pumps (0.54 IU/kg (0.4–1.1) vs 0.59 (0.3–0.9), P=0.85). Pregnancy outcomes were similar in the two cohorts. At multivariate logistic regression analysis, insulin dose at 8 weeks (OR 8.2 (95% CI: 1.6–41.9), P=0.01), severe hypoglycaemia in the year preceding pregnancy (6.0 (2.6–13.7), P<0.0001) and impaired hypoglycaemia awareness (4.8 (2.2–10.3), P<0.0001) were associated with severe hypoglycaemia.

Conclusion: A lower incidence of severe hypoglycaemia in pregnancy without deteriorated pregnancy outcomes was observed in a routine care setting. Lower insulin dose in early pregnancy and focus on high-risk patients may contribute.

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