Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT02266758

Randomizing Two Gestational Diabetes Screening Methods in a Diverse HMO

Comparing Two Gestational Diabetes Screening Methods: A Pragmatic Outpatient RCT

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
23,792 (actual)
Sponsor
Kaiser Permanente · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This project randomizes two different screening strategies for diabetes in pregnancy, among a study population of over 17,500 pregnant women and their babies (over 35,000 total) in a large diverse health maintenance organization (HMO), to determine how diagnosis and treatment based on these two strategies in routine clinical care affects complications for the baby and the mother.

Detailed description

Two recent randomized placebo-controlled trials show that gestational diabetes (GDM) treatment (vs. none) improves maternal and perinatal outcomes, based on diagnosis with a 2- step screening strategy. Also, a large multi-center prospective cohort study showed a linear relationship with glucose and maternal and perinatal outcomes, based on screening with a single 75g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). Based on this large cohort's findings, the American Diabetes Association recommended that clinical practice adopt the 1-step 75g screening approach for diagnosing GDM. The American College of Obstetrics \& Gynecology took the opposite stance, recommending the traditional 2-step screening: because it alone has RCT outcome evidence. What is urgently needed to best inform clinical practice and health policy is not an additional GDM treatment vs. control trial, but a pragmatic randomized controlled trial (RCT) testing the 2 recommended clinical strategies. To pragmatically address this critical research gap, we propose to randomize an estimated 17,626 diverse women to GDM screening (2-step vs. 75g OGTT) as part of their clinical care in the Kaiser Permanente Northwest (KPNW) and Hawaii (KPH) regional health plans. The investigators will use the plans' electronic medical record (EMR) system at the time of GDM screening to randomize the women. Both KPNW and KPH regions universally screen for GDM at 24-28 weeks gestation, as part of clinical care. By randomizing GDM screening in the context of clinical care, the investigators will: Compare GDM prevalences (Aim 1) and differences in maternal and perinatal outcomes between screening strategies (Aim 2). Determine the concordance of the 75g OGTT with GDM diagnosed by 2-step, among a recruited sub-sample of 1,000 pregnant women at KPNW and KPH (Aim 3). The results of this pragmatic RCT are expected to help resolve the current public policy debate on the potential benefits and risks of each strategy in clinical obstetric practice.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERGDM Screening Methods

Timeline

Start date
2014-06-03
Primary completion
2018-12-31
Completion
2024-12-31
First posted
2014-10-17
Last updated
2023-08-02

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02266758. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.