Mothers After Gestational Diabetes in Australia Diabetes Prevention Program (MAGDA-DPP) post-natal intervention: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Mothers After Gestational Diabetes in Australia Diabetes Prevention Program (MAGDA-DPP) post-natal intervention: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Date
2013-10-17
Authors
Shih, Sophy T F
Davis-Lameloise, Nathalie
Janus, Edward Denis
Wildey, Carol
Versace, Vincent L
Hagger, Virginia
Asproloupos, Dino
O'Reilly, Sharleen L
Phillips, Paddy Andrew
Ackland, Michael
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BioMed Central Ltd.
Abstract
Background: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is defined as glucose intolerance with its onset or first
recognition during pregnancy. Post-GDM women have a life-time risk exceeding 70% of developing type 2 diabetes
mellitus (T2DM). Lifestyle modifications reduce the incidence of T2DM by up to 58% for high-risk individuals.
Methods/Design: The Mothers After Gestational Diabetes in Australia Diabetes Prevention Program (MAGDA-DPP)
is a randomized controlled trial aiming to assess the effectiveness of a structured diabetes prevention intervention
for post-GDM women. This trial has an intervention group participating in a diabetes prevention program (DPP),
and a control group receiving usual care from their general practitioners during the same time period. The 12-
month intervention comprises an individual session followed by five group sessions at two-week intervals, and two
follow-up telephone calls. A total of 574 women will be recruited, with 287 in each arm. The women will undergo
blood tests, anthropometric measurements, and self-reported health status, diet, physical activity, quality of life,
depression, risk perception and healthcare service usage, at baseline and 12 months. At completion, primary
outcome (changes in diabetes risk) and secondary outcome (changes in psychosocial and quality of life
measurements and in cardiovascular disease risk factors) will be assessed in both groups.
Discussion: This study aims to show whether MAGDA-DPP leads to a reduction in diabetes risk for post-GDM
women. The characteristics that predict intervention completion and improvement in clinical and behavioral
measures will be useful for further development of DPPs for this population
Description
Keywords
Diabetes
Citation
Shih, S., et al., 2013. Mothers After Gestational Diabetes in Australia Diabetes Prevention Program (MAGDA-DPP) post-natal intervention: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials, 14:339.