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Published in: Acta Diabetologica 5/2014

01-10-2014 | Short Communication

Early pregnancy metabolite profiling discovers a potential biomarker for the subsequent development of gestational diabetes mellitus

Authors: Jamie V. de Seymour, Cathryn A. Conlon, Karolina Sulek, Silas G. Villas Bôas, Lesley M. E. McCowan, Louise C. Kenny, Philip N. Baker

Published in: Acta Diabetologica | Issue 5/2014

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Abstract

Current early pregnancy screening tools to identify women at risk of developing gestational diabetes mellitus lack both specificity and sensitivity. As a result, the foetus and mother are often subjected to insult during disease progression, prior to diagnosis and treatment in later pregnancy. Metabolomics is an analytical approach, which allows for appraisal of small molecular mass compounds in a biofluid. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate the relationship between the early gestation serum metabolite profile and the subsequent development of gestational diabetes mellitus in the search for early pregnancy biomarkers and potential metabolic mechanisms. Our nested case-control study analysed maternal serum at 20 weeks’ gestation, obtained from the New Zealand cohort of the Screening for Pregnancy Endpoints study. Metabolomic profiling was performed using gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry, and metabolites were identified using R software and an in-house mass spectral library. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS version 21.0. Forty-eight metabolites were identified in the serum samples. Itaconic acid (P = 0.0003), with a false discovery rate of 0.012, was found to be significantly more abundant in women who subsequently developed gestational diabetes mellitus, when compared to controls with uncomplicated pregnancies. The current pilot study found that itaconic acid may have potential as a novel biomarker in early pregnancy to predict the subsequent development of gestational diabetes mellitus. However, the findings from this pilot study require validation with a larger, diverse population before translation into the clinical setting.
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Footnotes
1
The SCOPE study was a multinational prospective study that recruited women with healthy nulliparous singleton pregnancies between 2004 and 2011. The New Zealand cohort of the SCOPE study recruited 2,032 women in total, 2.1 % of whom subsequently developed GDM (for diagnostic criteria see Online Resource 1).
 
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Metadata
Title
Early pregnancy metabolite profiling discovers a potential biomarker for the subsequent development of gestational diabetes mellitus
Authors
Jamie V. de Seymour
Cathryn A. Conlon
Karolina Sulek
Silas G. Villas Bôas
Lesley M. E. McCowan
Louise C. Kenny
Philip N. Baker
Publication date
01-10-2014
Publisher
Springer Milan
Published in
Acta Diabetologica / Issue 5/2014
Print ISSN: 0940-5429
Electronic ISSN: 1432-5233
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00592-014-0626-7

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