Resumen de Investigación
Analyzed using Evidence Intelligence™

Prebiotic supplementation may reduce GDM rates in overweight pregnant women

Última actualización 5 de julio de 2026

Key finding

Prebiotic group 11.0% vs. control group 21.8%; adjusted relative risk 0.50; 95% CI 0.28 to 0.89.

This study investigated how pre-pregnancy BMI influences the effect of prebiotic supplementation on gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) rates.

Quick read

Study at a glance

The essential study design details in one scan.

EvidenceScore™

Moderate

Study type

RCTs

Follow-up

Medium-Term (3–12 mo)

Risk of bias

Some Concerns

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Plain-language summary

What this paper says

A plain-language read of the study's main message and where it applies.

Study focus

This study investigated how pre-pregnancy BMI influences the effect of prebiotic supplementation on gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) rates.

Clinical relevance

Understanding how prebiotic supplementation interacts with pre-pregnancy BMI is crucial for developing targeted dietary recommendations for pregnant women. The findings suggest that while prebiotics may benefit overweight and obese women by lowering GDM risk, they could pose risks for normal weight women, indicating the need for personalized nutritional strategies during pregnancy.

Keep in mind

The study may not be generalizable to all populations due to specific inclusion criteria. Sample size may limit the robustness of the findings. Unmeasured confounders could influence the outcomes.

Published in

Referencia de la Revista

Publication details and source links for this paper.

Rachelle AP, Thomas RS, Summer VMW, et al. Pre-pregnancy BMI modifies the effect of prebiotic supplementation on gestational diabetes mellitus rates: a randomized controlled trial. Nutrition Journal. 2026;25:62. doi:10.1186/s12937-026-01323-9

Efectos Principales

Prebiotic supplementation reduced GDM incidence in overweight/obese women (11.0% vs. 21.8%; adjusted RR 0.50).

Normal weight women on prebiotics had higher GDM incidence compared to controls (7.7% vs. 4.4%; adjusted RR 1.72).

Evidence network

How this study fits

Understand where this research contributes within the broader evidence network.

Evidence Context

This study contributes evidence to Prebiotic supplementation and Gestational diabetes mellitus incidence.

Primary intervention

Prebiotic supplementation

Primary outcomes

  • Gestational diabetes mellitus incidence

Evidence relationships

Intervention and outcome relationships this study adds to the evidence network.

1
Evidence pairs
1
Relationships
0
Evidence topics
contributes_evidence

Editorial context

Why this study matters

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Evidence network role

This section describes how the study fits into the current evidence network. It does not determine whether an intervention works on its own.

Limited contributionLow confidenceNetwork score: 38

0

Related topics

1

Evidence pairs

0

Related studies

Why it is useful

  • Contributes to 1 evidence relationship
  • Includes primary outcome data
  • Linked to 0 direct semantic evidence topics

Core evidence

Study findings

The primary outcomes reported in this study.

Gestational diabetes mellitus incidence

Prebiotic supplementation → Gestational diabetes mellitus incidence

Prebiotic supplementation → Gestational diabetes mellitus incidence

Evidence Intelligence™
ImpactScore™
100
Very Positive
EvidenceScore™
Emerging
Score 59 · Based on 1 study
ConsistencyScore™
unclear
Not enough independent studies
Supporting studies: Based on 1 study
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12 tracked topics

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Research Notes

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evidence suggest

La Evidencia Sugiere

  • Prebiotic supplementation decreased GDM rates in overweight/obese women by 10.8%.
  • Normal weight women showed a 3.3% higher incidence of GDM with prebiotics.
who this applies

A quién se aplica

  • Overweight or obese pregnant women.
  • Normal weight pregnant women.
keep in mind

Tener en Cuenta

  • Results may not apply to women outside the study's demographic.
  • The interaction between BMI and prebiotic effects requires further investigation.
  • Findings should be interpreted with caution due to potential confounding factors.
between the lines

Entre Líneas

  • The study may not be generalizable to all populations due to specific inclusion criteria.
  • Sample size may limit the robustness of the findings.
  • Unmeasured confounders could influence the outcomes.

Save this study

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Today's Activity

Your Evidence Workspace

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Saved this study

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12 tracked topics

Saved Studies

48 studies

Research Notes

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Connected Evidence

Explore related studies, evidence collections, and research questions.

Relationships organized using the Dediabetes Evidence Intelligence™ framework.

This study contributes to evidence on Prebiotic supplementation and Diabetes Incidence and Prevention.

Relaciones de evidencia relacionadas

Explore in Evidence Archive

This study contributes to the evidence on the following intervention-outcome relationships.

Questions answered by this study

Generated from the study's connected evidence using Evidence Intelligence™.

Does Prebiotic supplementation improve gestational diabetes mellitus incidence?

Emerging Evidence

Prebiotic supplementation appears to improve Gestational diabetes mellitus incidence.

ConsistencyScore™: Consistency cannot yet be determined from the available evidence.

Ranked evidence signals

  1. 1

    Gestational diabetes mellitus incidence

    EvidenceScore™ Emerging | EvidenceScore™ 59.0 | strong positive | ConsistencyScore™ Unclear | 1 study

Why this answer: This answer is based on a single supporting study.

Limitations

  • Only one supporting study is available.
  • Consistency cannot yet be determined.
  • Population details are unavailable.
1 supporting studyUpdated: Jul 2026
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