Home Research Feeds Gestational diabetes-related gut microbiome dysbiosis is not influenced by different Asian ethnicities and dietary interventions: a pilot study

Gestational diabetes-related gut microbiome dysbiosis is not influenced by different Asian ethnicities and dietary interventions: a pilot studyOriginal paper

Researched by:

  • Karen Pendergrass

Last Updated: 2026-07-04

Karen Pendergrass
Karen Pendergrass

Karen Pendergrass is a microbiome researcher specializing in microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). She systematically analyzes scientific literature to identify microbial patterns, develop hypotheses, and validate interventions. As the founder of the Microbiome Signatures Database, she bridges microbiome research with clinical practice. In 2012, based on her own investigative research, she became the first documented case of FMT for Celiac Disease, four years before the first published case study.

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Location
Singapore
Sample Site
Feces
Species
Homo sapiens

What was studied?

This pilot prospective cohort study examined whether ethnicity influences gut microbiome dysbiosis in pregnancies complicated by gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). The researchers also investigated whether diet and lifestyle modifications made after a GDM diagnosis could modulate the gut microbiome. Fecal samples were collected at two time points, 24 to 28 weeks and 36 to 40 weeks of gestation, and analyzed using targeted 16S rRNA gene-based amplicon sequencing. Statistical comparisons between groups used PERMANOVA, differential abundance testing used DeSeq2, and functional predictions were generated with PICRUSt2.

Who was studied?

The cohort included 53 women with GDM and 16 women without GDM, all residing in Singapore. Participants belonged to three Asian ethnic groups: Chinese, Malay, and Indian. This design allowed comparison of gut dysbiosis patterns both across GDM status and across ethnic background within the same population.

What were the most important findings?

Among women with GDM, gut microbiomes from the different ethnic groups shared common features rather than diverging by ethnicity. This suggests that GDM-related dysbiosis is a relatively consistent phenomenon across the Chinese, Malay, and Indian groups studied. The abstract indicates that ethnicity was not a major driver of the microbiome differences observed in these GDM pregnancies.

What are the greatest implications of this study?

If GDM-associated gut dysbiosis is largely independent of Asian ethnic background, microbiome-targeted strategies for GDM may generalize across these ethnic groups rather than needing ethnicity-specific approaches. This supports the idea that dietary and lifestyle interventions after a GDM diagnosis could be evaluated and applied similarly across diverse populations. As a pilot study, these findings point to the need for larger cohorts to confirm whether microbiome-based interventions can be standardized across ethnicities.

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