Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04523454

Contraception and Pregnancy in Diabetes Mellitus

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
96 (actual)
Sponsor
Imperial College London · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

This study seeks to expand upon and update this body of work. It will explore the knowledge and understanding women with diabetes have around pregnancy and conception, as well as establish how well prepared these women are for a pregnancy. Using this data, we will develop better services to inform women with diabetes about the contraception and pregnancy, as well inform the development of pre-conception counselling services for women with diabetes. If successful, we would anticipate seeing an improvement in performance in future National Diabetes in Pregnancy audits.

Detailed description

Worldwide, 44% of pregnancies are unplanned; in the United Kingdom 45% of pregnancies and one third of births are unplanned. If a woman wants 2 children, she will spend, on average, 5 years trying to conceive or being pregnant, and 30 years trying to prevent pregnancy. Women with diabetes are known to have 'high-risk' pregnancies. Complications for the mother include worsening diabetic control, particularly with increased hypoglycaemia in the 1st trimester; deterioration in retinopathy and nephropathy; pre-eclampsia; birth trauma due to fetal macrosomia. For the fetus, there are increased risks of congenital abnormalities; macrosomia with resultant birth trauma including shoulder dystocia; intrauterine growth restriction; miscarriage; still birth; neonatal unit admission and neonatal death. The National Institute of Clinical and Health Excellence (NICE) guidance (NG3) contains a number of recommendations to prepare women with diabetes for a healthy pregnancy, and recommendations to avoid a pregnancy in poorly controlled diabetes; it also has recommendations about contraception. However, the National Diabetes in Pregnancy Audit 2019 shows that seven out of eight women are not adequately prepared pre-pregnancy, and there are still increased numbers of neonatal deaths, stillbirths, congenital anomalies, large and small for gestational age babies and neonatal unit admissions, compared to pregnancies in women without diabetes. The cause for these poor outcomes, despite the NICE guidance, needs to be understood to enable pregnancy outcomes to improve. One likely factor is poor patient knowledge about the complications associated with pregnancy. One study, undertaken in 2009, showed that only 35% of women with diabetes of reproductive age recalled having any discussion about pregnancy, and only 25% were aware of any of the risks associated with pregnancy. Another study in women with diabetes seen in an antenatal clinic showed that even if a woman was aware of the risks associated with diabetes in pregnancy, she often did not attend for pre-conception counselling and preparation. The reasons for this were multifactorial, including falling pregnant faster than expected, and pervious poor interactions with healthcare professionals.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2020-10-02
Primary completion
2021-08-01
Completion
2021-08-01
First posted
2020-08-21
Last updated
2024-09-23
Results posted
2024-09-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04523454. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.