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Maturity-onset diabetes of youth (MODY) are the most frequent monogenic diabetes with autosomic dominant inheritance (2% of diabetes). The MODY2 diabetes is related to a defect in the glucokinase (GCK) enzyme, the first limiting step of insulin secretion. An abnormal GCK leads to a delayed insulin secretion. Patients with GCK mutations have only mild raised fasting plasma glucose. Treatment is usually unnecessary since hyperglycemia is stable and MODY2 patients have no microvascular complications of diabetes. In contrast, pregnancy in MODY2 women is a challenging situation. A non-mutated fetus will produce excess insulin in response to raised maternal blood glucose leading to an accelerated growth and a higher risk of macrosomia. The mother of non-mutated fetus should therefore be treated to normalize her blood glucose levels. On contrary, a mutated fetus will produce a delayed insulin secretion (as his MODY2 mother) in response to maternal hyperglycemia. Consequently insulin therapy during pregnancy would reduce fetal insulin secretion and result in a low birth weight.
Moreover, insulin therapy exposes pregnant women to more labor induction, prematurity and cesarean deliveries. In these MODY2 women whose glucose set point is physiologically higher, glycemic goals are difficult to achieve while often requiring extensive insulin therapy. An optimal situation would consist in initiating insulin therapy only for women with non-mutated offsprings. Unfortunately no antenatal diagnosis of the GCK mutation on fetal cells is available yet. In literature, birth weight differences between mutated and non-mutated neonates may reach up to 700g. In clinical practice, two strategies are used but without standardized protocol on glycemic targets, delay and doses of insulin : 1) insulin at diagnosis of pregnancy 2) treatment based on fetal abdominal circumference and fetal weight measurements by ultrasonography (US) and initiated if fetal biometry is greater than the 75th percentile.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate for the first time these two management strategies through a prospective and standardized study. Hypothesis: US assessment would be sufficient to identify fetuses at risk of macrosomia and to initiate insulin treatment in mothers.
Full description
Study design The investigators propose to conduct a national multicenter prospective study on the clinical management of pregnancy in women with GCK mutations.
Medical management of the pregnancy After obtaining written informed consent, each investigator of the Diabetes Departments will include MODY2 women, at the time of gestation planning or at the first prenatal appointment. Pre-gestational maternal parameters (maternal age, pre-gestational weight, blood glucose, mean blood glucose levels before and 2 hours post prandial over one week when available, HbA1c, parity, medical history of macrosomia) will be collected.
Antenatal care will be provided according to the local routine protocol for MODY2. All women will receive dietary and physical activity counselling according to current recommendations for pregnant women with pregestational diabetes. Vitamin B9, 0.4 or 5 mg/day, according to local habits, will be prescribed as usual care from pregestational appointment until the end of first trimester.
In both groups, care will be standardized as follows:
Group of women with insulin therapy from the beginning of pregnancy :
Treatment will be conducted according to national guidelines for GDM (2010) and consists in:
Insulin treatment will be stopped only in case of fetal restricted growth defined by an estimated fetal weight < 10th percentile, on two consecutive US with at least 3 weeks interval and no other etiology.
Group of women with insulin therapy initiated according to fetal US measurements :
Women will monitor their blood glucose levels before and 2 hours after meals twice a week during the whole pregnancy.
In this group, MODY2 women will not be treated with insulin until delivery, except when:
When initiated, insulin therapy will be conducted as described in 11.2, with the same capillary blood glucose targets
-Maternal care Systematic visits in the Diabetes department will be scheduled at 2- 4 weeks intervals. A monthly visit in the Obstetrics department will be scheduled from 22 weeks of gestation.
Routine care, including measurement of weight, height and arterial pressure, as well an urinary testing for proteinuria will be performed at the first appointment and at each following visit.
In case of insulin treatment, the type and dose of insulin will be recorded, as well as the frequency of mild or severe hypoglycemia.
Women with pre-gestational HbA1c > 6.5% will be treated with insulin from the pregnancy planning period or from the beginning of the pregnancy as described in part 6.2.1 and all data concerning these pregnancies will be registered.
The presence of a maternal depression will be reflected by a score of more than 12 on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale at three months post partum.
-Anthropometrics and biological measures in neonates
Anthropometrics parameters will be recorded the first day of life for each neonate:
Capillary blood glucose test will be collected 3 hours before the first feeding to look for hypoglycaemia. After the second feeding, blood glucose tests will be repeated every 6 hours if > 2.5 mmol/L. If blood glucose is normal during 24 hours and feeding is also normal, neonate glucose monitoring will be stopped.
Infants will be categorized as having clinical neonatal hypoglycaemia if there are symptoms and/or treatment with a glucose infusion or a glucose value ≤ 2 mmol/L.
C-peptide will be measured on cord blood. Hyperinsulinemia is defined by a C-peptide level above the 90th percentile of a neonate reference population. Samples will be centralized in a single laboratory for determination of the C-peptide level.
Neonatal leptin will be measured on cord blood as a biological marker of infant adiposity. Leptin is specifically produced by adipose tissue and placenta, and maternal leptin does not cross the placenta. Fetal leptin reflects the amount of adipose tissue, and its production could be regulated by insulin (Hauguel-de Mouzon, Lepercq et al. 2006).
-GCK genotyping In order to analyze the effect of the maternal treatment according to the fetal genotype, a targeted sequencing of the maternal GCK mutation will be performed on DNA extracted from blood cord sample. The mother (and her partner) will sign an informed written consent for the genetic testing of their baby.
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46 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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