Feasibility and acceptability of continuous glucose monitoring in pregnancy for the diagnosis of gestational diabetes: A single-centre prospective mixed methods study.
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Peer-reviewed
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Undiagnosed diabetes in pregnancy is associated with stillbirth and perinatal complications, but standard testing for gestational diabetes using the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) is impractical and exacerbates healthcare inequalities. There is an urgent need to improve the accuracy, acceptability and accessibility of glucose testing in pregnancy. We qualitatively assessed the feasibility and acceptability of two alternative home-based methods of glucose testing in pregnant women, using continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), with or without a home-based OGTT. METHODS: We recruited women with a singleton pregnancy at 28 weeks' gestation with ≥1 risk factor for gestational diabetes attending antenatal glucose testing. A Dexcom G6 CGM device was sited and women were asked to take a 75g OGTT solution (Rapilose) on day 4 after an overnight fast. Qualitative interviews were performed with 20 participants using video conferencing according to a semi-structured interview schedule and thematically analysed using NVIVO software. RESULTS: 92 women were recruited; 73 also underwent a home OGTT. Women had an average of 6.9 days of glucose monitoring and found the CGM painless, easy to use with few or no adverse events. During the qualitative study, the main themes identified were reassurance and convenience. All women interviewed would recommend CGM and a home OGTT for diagnosis of gestational diabetes. CONCLUSIONS: CGM with or without a home OGTT is feasible and acceptable to pregnant women for diagnosis of gestational diabetes and offered advantages of convenience and reassurance. Further work is needed to clarify diagnostic thresholds for gestational diabetes using CGM metrics.
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Acknowledgements: We thank our participants for their willingness to take part in this study. Dexcom, Inc. kindly supplied free Dexcom G6 CGM systems and supported research nurse staff costs to improve diabetes care during the Covid-19 pandemic. We are grateful to the staff in Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, including the phlebotomy department and diabetes in pregnancy service, and the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Clinical Research Network (CRN Eastern) for supporting this study.
Funder: Dexcom; funder-id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100015769
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1932-6203

