Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) represents far more than a transient glycaemic disorder: it is a sentinel metabolic event that unveils pre-existing defects in β-cell function and insulin action, with profound implications for both maternal and offspring cardiometabolic health across the lifespan. The physiological insulin resistance of pregnancy, driven by placental hormones and maternal immune modulation, intensifies progressively, resulting in a 60%-65% reduction in insulin sensitivity by the third trimester. This metabolic challenge necessitates a compensatory 200%-250% increase in insulin secretion to maintain euglycaemia. When pancreatic β-cells fail to meet this demand, maternal hyperglycaemia develops, triggering foetal hyperinsulinemia and establishing an intrauterine environment that promotes accelerated foetal growth, adipogenesis and adverse metabolic programming. The intergenerational consequences of GDM extend beyond the perinatal period. Landmark studies in Pima Indians demonstrate that intrauterine exposure to maternal diabetes confers an elevated risk of childhood obesity and early-onset type 2 diabetes in offspring, independent of shared genetic susceptibility, thereby perpetuating a transgenerational cycle of metabolic disease, potentially mediated in part by epigenetic mechanisms. Diagnostic strategies for GDM vary internationally, with the one-step 75-g OGTT (IADPSG/ADA criteria) and the two-step Carpenter-Coustan approach yielding comparable maternal and neonatal outcomes. In GDM, management typically starts with individualized medical nutrition therapy and physical activity, with insulin as the preferred pharmacological treatment when glycaemic targets are not achieved. Metformin and glyburide, despite their convenience and oral administration, remain controversial due to placental transfer and still limited long-term safety data in offspring. Given its increasing prevalence and long-term implications, GDM is both a clinical and public health concern. Early recognition and evidence-based management provide an opportunity to interrupt the intergenerational transmission of metabolic risk and preserve long-term cardiometabolic health.
Kanat et al. (Wed,) studied this question.