Gestational Diabetes Screening Calculator

Track screening values, thresholds, and pregnancy risk factors. Get clear interpretations for common testing approaches. Understand next steps before discussing results with your clinician.

Calculator Form

Use mg/dL for all glucose values. Leave unrelated fields blank.

Choose a testing pathway first. The form adapts automatically.

Optional Risk Factors

Reset
This tool is educational support only. It does not replace laboratory reporting, medical diagnosis, or personalized advice from your obstetric clinician.

Formula Used

This calculator combines testing thresholds with an optional background risk score. The score helps prioritize follow-up but does not diagnose gestational diabetes on its own.

Pathway Rule Threshold Logic
One-step 75 g OGTT IADPSG style cutoffs Positive when any entered value meets or exceeds fasting 92, 1 hour 180, or 2 hour 153 mg/dL.
Two-step 50 g screen User-selected screen cutoff Positive when the 1 hour challenge meets or exceeds 130, 135, or 140 mg/dL.
Two-step 100 g OGTT Carpenter-Coustan Counts abnormal values at fasting 95, 1 hour 180, 2 hour 155, and 3 hour 140 mg/dL. Two or more abnormal values flag the pathway.
Two-step 100 g OGTT NDDG Counts abnormal values at fasting 105, 1 hour 190, 2 hour 165, and 3 hour 145 mg/dL. Two or more abnormal values flag the pathway.

Risk score formula: age points + BMI points + previous gestational diabetes + prior macrosomia + family history + PCOS + hypertension + glycosuria.

Risk bands: Low = 0 to 2 points, Moderate = 3 to 5 points, High = 6 or more points.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select either the one-step or two-step testing pathway.
  2. Enter gestational age, maternal age, and pre-pregnancy BMI if available.
  3. For the two-step pathway, choose your 50 g screen cutoff and 100 g rule.
  4. Type the glucose values from your lab report using mg/dL units.
  5. Add optional risk factors for a broader pregnancy risk profile.
  6. Press the calculate button to display the result above the form.
  7. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save the interpretation.
  8. Review the output with your clinician for final medical guidance.

Example Data Table

Scenario Pathway Key Values Interpretation
Example 1 One-step 75 g Fasting 94, 1 h 182, 2 h 149 Positive because fasting and 1 hour cross common one-step thresholds.
Example 2 One-step 75 g Fasting 86, 1 h 166, 2 h 134 Negative because none of the three entered values reach the thresholds.
Example 3 Two-step 50 g + 100 g 50 g screen 156, fasting 98, 1 h 184, 2 h 150, 3 h 132 Positive under Carpenter-Coustan because two diagnostic values are abnormal.
Example 4 Two-step 50 g + 100 g 50 g screen 128, no OGTT entered Negative screen at a 140 mg/dL cutoff, pending clinician context.

FAQs

1. When is gestational diabetes screening usually done?

Most routine screening happens between 24 and 28 weeks of pregnancy. Earlier testing may be used when risk factors are already present.

2. What is the difference between one-step and two-step testing?

The one-step pathway uses a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test. The two-step pathway starts with a 50 g screen, then uses a 100 g diagnostic test if needed.

3. Why can I choose different 50 g screen cutoffs?

Some clinics use 130, 135, or 140 mg/dL for the 50 g challenge. The calculator lets you match the cutoff used by your testing center.

4. Can one abnormal value diagnose gestational diabetes?

Under common one-step 75 g criteria, one abnormal value can flag the pathway. Under common two-step 100 g rules, at least two abnormal values are usually required.

5. Why does this calculator include risk factors?

Risk factors help show whether extra follow-up may be reasonable. They add context, but they do not replace formal laboratory interpretation or diagnosis.

6. Can I enter mmol/L values?

This version expects mg/dL values. Convert your report first if your laboratory uses mmol/L, otherwise the interpretation will be inaccurate.

7. What if my test happened outside 24 to 28 weeks?

The calculator still works, but it adds a note. Screening timing can vary for high-risk pregnancies or delayed prenatal care.

8. Is this calculator a medical diagnosis?

No. It is an educational screening aid that summarizes entered values against common thresholds. Final interpretation belongs to your obstetric clinician.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.