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The goal of this observational study is to learn how sleep quality, mental health, lifestyle behaviors, and metabolic markers are related to glucose control and pregnancy outcomes in women with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will:
Full description
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is associated with disturbances in glucose regulation as well as a range of behavioral, psychological, and metabolic factors that may contribute to pregnancy outcomes. This prospective observational cohort study follows pregnant women with newly diagnosed GDM to evaluate how sleep quality, anxiety, eating behaviors, physical activity, and metabolic markers relate to glycemic control and perinatal outcomes.
Participants are managed according to standard clinical pathways at a tertiary obstetric center and are allocated either to short inpatient glucose monitoring or to home-based digital monitoring using the FreeStyle Libre system. These pathways reflect real-world clinical indications and are not assigned by the research team. The study leverages this natural variation to compare differences in behavioral, metabolic, and perinatal profiles between groups.
At enrollment, participants complete validated questionnaires assessing sleep quality (PSQI), anxiety (STAI), and eating behaviors (TFEQ). Clinical assessments and laboratory testing include glucose measures, liver enzymes, blood counts, and other metabolic parameters routinely collected in GDM care. Glucose monitoring data are obtained either from inpatient capillary measurements or from downloaded home-based sensor data, depending on the participant's care pathway.
Participants are followed from diagnosis (24-34 weeks of gestation) until delivery. Perinatal outcomes-including birth weight, mode of delivery, neonatal hypoglycemia, and NICU admission-are collected from medical records after delivery. The study analyzes associations between behavioral factors, metabolic markers, and both glycemic and perinatal outcomes. It also evaluates whether differences in the mode of glucose monitoring correspond to differences in maternal psychological well-being or pregnancy outcomes.
This study aims to generate multidimensional insights that may inform more personalized and less burdensome care models for women with GDM, integrating behavioral, metabolic, and clinical information to improve maternal and neonatal health.
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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