A familiar worry, a new window
You're 37, pregnant for the first time, and excited. You've also heard that gestational diabetes is more common at your age.
The standard test for it happens around week 24 to 28. That's a long wait to wonder.
What if simpler signals, measured much earlier, could help your doctor know who to watch most closely?
More women are having their first baby later in life. It's a real, rising trend.
Gestational diabetes (GDM) — high blood sugar that shows up during pregnancy — gets more common with age. It can mean bigger babies, harder deliveries, and a higher future risk of type 2 diabetes for both mother and child.
For first-time mothers over 35, called advanced maternal age nulliparous women in medical papers, the risk is higher still. Yet early-screening tools tailored to this group have been in short supply.
Old way vs newer signals
The old way is straightforward. Around the middle of pregnancy, you drink a sweet glucose solution and get blood drawn at set times.
It's effective. But it's late. By then, blood sugar has already been drifting out of range for weeks or months.
The new approach looks back at the bloodwork a woman typically already has done by week 10 to 13 — numbers drawn for routine checks — and asks which ones quietly predict trouble later.
Think of your body during early pregnancy as a house with the heating system slowly being retuned. Hormones shift how cells respond to sugar.
In some women, that tuning goes smoothly. In others, it drifts — and your blood quietly starts holding onto more sugar, more inflammation, and more immune cells than it should.
Those drifts leave fingerprints: a bit more sugar in the urine, slightly higher fasting blood sugar, a little extra immune cell activity. None of it screams "problem." But together, the pattern can.
Researchers looked back at 354 first-time mothers, all aged 35 or older. Of those, 140 were later diagnosed with gestational diabetes; 214 were not.
They compared each group's records from weeks 10 to 13 of pregnancy. Five factors stood out once the numbers were run through a statistical model.
Urinary glucose (sugar spilling into the urine) was the strongest signal. Women who had it were roughly 8 times more likely to later develop GDM.
Higher fasting blood sugar more than doubled the odds for each small unit increase. A higher neutrophil count (a type of immune cell) raised risk by about 21% per unit. Higher overall white blood cell count also nudged risk up.
Use of assisted reproductive technology (ART), like IVF, was associated with about 60% higher odds.
The model's overall accuracy was moderate — it catches about 57% of cases while correctly clearing about 76% of unaffected women.
That's helpful, but it's not a crystal ball.
The bigger picture
This research fits a growing push in obstetrics: move screening earlier, and personalize it.
Blood sugar can start drifting in the first trimester. Early flags could mean earlier nutrition support, earlier exercise guidance, and more frequent check-ins — all gentle, low-risk interventions that may ease the rest of the pregnancy.
For women already using IVF to conceive, the finding is worth noting but not alarming. ART itself likely isn't the cause; it may be a marker for other risk factors that tend to cluster together.
If you're thinking about pregnancy in your late 30s or 40s, none of this should discourage you. Most women in this age group have healthy pregnancies.
What it does mean: your early bloodwork is more useful than it may look. Ask your OB whether your fasting blood sugar, urine glucose, and white blood cell counts suggest extra monitoring.
You don't need a new test. You need the ones you're already getting, read with an extra question in mind.
Where it falls short
This was a retrospective study at a single center, using data already in medical records. That design can miss details that weren't recorded consistently.
The model's sensitivity — its ability to catch actual GDM cases — was 57%, meaning more than 4 in 10 cases slipped through. It's a starting point, not a final tool.
The findings were in one population and may not apply equally to women in different regions or ethnic backgrounds.
Researchers want to test this tiered approach in larger, multicenter studies before it becomes standard practice. If it holds up, early-pregnancy risk scoring could join the quiet background of prenatal care.
Until then, the message is empowering: you and your OB may already have the data you need to watch more carefully, much earlier.