A Predictive Metabolic Signature for the Transition From Gestational Diabetes Mellitus to Type 2 Diabetes

Amina Allalou, Amarnadh Nalla, Kacey J Prentice, Ying Liu, Ming Zhang, Feihan F Dai, Xian Ning, Lucy R Osborne, Brian J Cox, Erica P Gunderson, Michael B Wheeler

55 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) affects 3-14% of pregnancies, with 20-50% of these women progressing to type 2 diabetes (T2D) within 5 years. This study sought to develop a metabolomics signature to predict the transition from GDM to T2D. A prospective cohort of 1,035 women with GDM pregnancy were enrolled at 6-9 weeks postpartum (baseline) and were screened for T2D annually for 2 years. Of 1,010 women without T2D at baseline, 113 progressed to T2D within 2 years. T2D developed in another 17 women between 2 and 4 years. A nested case-control design used 122 incident case patients matched to non-case patients by age, prepregnancy BMI, and race/ethnicity. We conducted metabolomics with baseline fasting plasma and identified 21 metabolites that significantly differed by incident T2D status. Machine learning optimization resulted in a decision tree modeling that predicted T2D incidence with a discriminative power of 83.0% in the training set and 76.9% in an independent testing set, which is far superior to measuring fasting plasma glucose levels alone. The American Diabetes Association recommends T2D screening in the early postpartum period via oral glucose tolerance testing after GDM, which is a time-consuming and inconvenient procedure. Our metabolomics signature predicted T2D incidence from a single fasting blood sample. This study represents the first metabolomics study of the transition from GDM to T2D validated in an independent testing set, facilitating early interventions.

Original languageEnglish
JournalDiabetes
Volume65
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)2529-2539
Number of pages11
ISSN0012-1797
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2016

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A Predictive Metabolic Signature for the Transition From Gestational Diabetes Mellitus to Type 2 Diabetes'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this