Longitudinal trends for diabetes during pregnancy: California 1983-2015

Linda L Remy and Ted Clay

Objective: To report longitudinal trends (1983-2015) for pregnant women hospitalized in California with pre-existing Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes mellitus (PDM) and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). Research design and methods: Using 1983-2015 patient discharge data, we identified admissions of pregnant California resident women, age 15 to 44 (N = 18,560,269). We used the Clinical Classification System to classify diagnoses and procedures. Results: Over the period, 18,952,079 pregnant California-resident women age 15 to 44 were admitted to hospital. Of these, 212,631 (1.1%) had PDM and 787,361 (4.2%) had GDM. At start-of-period 1983- 1987, the percent of admissions with either condition was about 1% each. By 2013-2015, the PDM rate rose to 1.5% while the GDM rate rose to 9.1%. Compared to women without diabetes, those with any diabetes had greater risk and rising trends for co-morbidities and adverse outcomes. Discussion: It is not clear if these trends reflect real underlying changes in population health or changes in professional attention to these conditions. Trends may be rising because of different diagnostic criteria, because of underlying changes in risk factors, or for both reasons. Conclusions: Regardless of the underlying reason, PDM and GDM pose significant risk to a growing proportion of California’s pregnant women.
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