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Jun 26, 2015 - Gestational Diabetes Mellitus in Mothers as a Diabetes Predictor in Fathers: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis. DOI: 10.2337/dc15-0855.
Diabetes Care

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Gestational Diabetes Mellitus in Mothers as a Diabetes Predictor in Fathers: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis

Kaberi Dasgupta,1,2 Nancy Ross,3 Sara Meltzer,2 Deborah Da Costa,1,2 Meranda Nakhla,1,4 Youssef Habel,1 and Elham Rahme1,2

DOI: 10.2337/dc15-0855

postdelivery discharge date (i.e., index date). Procedures were reviewed and approved by the Quebec Access to Information Commission (Commission d’acc`es a` l’information du Qu´ebec) and the institutional review board of the McGill University Health Centre. Most of the 70,890 fathers (50% partners with GDM) were under 40 years of age at baseline (87% vs. 87.8%), lived with their partner (93.1% vs. 91.5%)

as suggested by concordant health administration territory, and shared the partner’s ethnocultural background (91.5% vs. 90.9%). More fathers with partners with GDM lived in socioeconomically deprived neighborhoods (43.3% vs. 37.3% from two most deprived quintiles) and were of non-European background (23.3% vs. 18.1%). More partners with GDM had prior pregnancies (50.7% vs. 28.2%).

e-LETTERS – OBSERVATIONS

In women, there is a sevenfold risk increase for type 2 diabetes in the years following a pregnancy complicated by gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) (1,2). We hypothesized that GDM also signals diabetes risk in men. Consistent with this possibility, prior studies demonstrate partners to be concordant for changes in weight (3) and physical activity (4), as well as for diabetes (5). No previous study has assessed a link between GDM in mothers and diabetes incidence in fathers. This retrospective cohort study combined information from health administrative, birth, and death registry data from the Canadian province of Quebec (universal health insurance). Randomly selected singleton live births (1 April 1990 to 31 December 2007) with two or more diagnostic codes for GDM in mothers (ICD-9 and -10) were matched to births without GDM (year of delivery, mother’s age-group, health region). Incident diabetes in fathers was evaluated from mother’s postdelivery discharge from hospital to the father’s departure from Quebec, death, or end of study period (31 March 2012). Diabetes was defined as 2 or more outpatient diabetes diagnoses or one hospital discharge diabetes diagnosis within a 2-year period. Comorbid condition information was based on data from the 3 years prior to the mother’s

Figure 1—Kaplan-Meier analysis of diabetes-free survival in fathers.

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Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada 3 Department of Geography, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada 4 Department of Pediatrics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada 2

Corresponding author: Kaberi Dasgupta, [email protected]. © 2015 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered.

Diabetes Care Publish Ahead of Print, published online June 26, 2015

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Diabetes Care

Maternal GDM Predicts Diabetes in Fathers

Over a mean of 13 years (SD 5.3), diabetes incidence was 4.01 per 1,000 person-years (95% CI 3.83, 4.20) in fathers whose partners had GDM and 3.03 per 1,000 person-years (95% CI 2.87, 3.19) in fathers whose partners did not (Fig. 1). This corresponded to 1,838 fathers with partners with GDM compared with 1,397 fathers with partners without GDM (5.2% vs. 3.9%). A Cox regression model demonstrated that diabetes incidence was 33% higher in fathers with partners with GDM (hazard ratio [HR] 1.33; 95% CI 1.24, 1.43). Results were similar when follow-up was truncated when health administrative territories of partners were discordant (HR 1.31; 95% CI 1.18, 1.44). There was some attenuation in adjusted models (HR 1.18; 95% CI 1.09, 1.27; adjusted for age, comorbid conditions, cohabitation, ethnocultural background, deprivation level). We did not have information on adiposity or physical activity levels; concordance for these factors likely underpins the link between GDM and incident diabetes in fathers.

In conclusion, GDM in mothers signals incident diabetes in fathers. This is partly mediated by shared deprivation level and ethnocultural background. GDM may be leveraged as a tool to enhance diabetes detection and prevention in fathers.

design and obtained funding. K.D., Y.H., and E.R. analyzed and interpreted the data. N.R., S.M., D.D.C., M.N., and E.R. revised the manuscript critically for intellectual content. K.D. is the guarantor of this work and, as such, had full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Acknowledgments. The authors would like to thank the Quebec Statistical Institute and the Re´ gie de l’assurance maladie du Que´ bec, and their teams for working to help ensure that data were appropriately selected, collated, and transmitted. This was critical to ensuring a high-quality study. Funding. This study was funded by an operating grant from the Canadian Diabetes Association (principal investigator K.D., coprincipal investigator E.R.). K.D. holds the Fonds de recherche du Qu´ebec– Sant´e (FRQS) Senior ClinicianScientist Award. The funders played no role in the conduct of the study, collection of data, management of the study, analysis of data, interpretation of data, or preparation of the manuscript. Duality of Interest. No potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article were reported. Author Contributions. K.D. drafted the manuscript. K.D., N.R., S.M., D.D.C., M.N., and E.R. contributed to the study conception and

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