A groundbreaking study published in The Lancet has uncovered significant connections between maternal diabetes and increased risks of neurodevelopmental disorders in children. Researchers analyzed over 56 million pregnancy records, revealing that diabetes during pregnancy can potentially impact a child's neurological development. The study found links to conditions like autism, ADHD, and various developmental disorders, with pre-gestational diabetes showing the strongest associations. These findings underscore the critical importance of proactive diabetes management and comprehensive monitoring for pregnant women.
April 09, 2025
Maternal diabetes may raise babies' risk of autism, ADHD: Lancet
A large study of 56·1
million pregnancies, published in The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology on
Tuesday, has reinforced the link between maternal diabetes and the risk of
neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism, attention-deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD).
Key Points
1 Large-scale study of 56 million pregnancies reveals critical health
connections
2 Pre-gestational diabetes shows stronger neurodevelopmental disorder
links
3 Global diabetes prevalence steadily increasing worldwide
Researchers from the
Central South University in China conducted a systematic review and
meta-analysis of 202 studies, involving 56,082,462 mother-child pairs.
The results showed that
maternal diabetes was associated with increased risks of all types of
neurodevelopmental disorders as well as lower intelligence and psychomotor
scores.
Children exposed to
maternal diabetes had an increased risk of any neurodevelopmental disorder
including autism spectrum disorder, ADHD, intellectual disability, specific
developmental disorders, communication disorder, motor disorder, and learning
disorder, compared with unexposed children.
"Maternal diabetes is
associated with an increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders and impaired
neurodevelopmental performance in children," said the researchers.
Maternal diabetes which
includes both pre-gestational diabetes (also known as preexisting diabetes) and
gestational diabetes -- high blood sugar during pregnancy -- has become
increasingly prevalent, affecting millions of pregnancies worldwide.
The global prevalences of
pre-gestational diabetes and gestational diabetes have also steadily increased
over the past four decades, with pre-gestational diabetes affecting about 2·4
per cent and gestational diabetes affecting 27·6 per cent of pregnancies
worldwide.
Obesity and metabolic
syndrome -- a cluster of conditions, including hypertension, diabetes, excess
abdominal fat, and abnormal cholesterol levels -- are known to be the major
drivers.
Besides negative impacts
such as caesarean section, macrosomia (excessive birth weight), and neonatal
jaundice, affecting both mothers and neonates, previous studies have shown
maternal diabetes might alter foetal brain development.
Notably, pre-gestational
diabetes was more strongly associated with the risk of most neurodevelopmental
disorders in children than gestational diabetes.
The findings also
emphasise "the importance of proactive interventions for women at risk of
developing diabetes and continuous monitoring of children with a history of
in-utero exposure to maternal diabetes", the researchers added.
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