Summary: In a multicentre trial in gestational diabetes, a CBT-based digital dietary intervention improved the glycaemic qualification rate, lowered post-lunch and post-dinner glucose, and reduced macrosomia compared with standard care, though fasting and post-breakfast glucose were unchanged.
PICO Summary
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Population | 200 women with gestational diabetes (171 completed); enrolled around 26 weeks; multicentre, China. |
| Intervention | Standard care plus a CBT-based digital dietary programme (structured education and behavioural strategies via a WeChat mini program). |
| Comparison | Standard care alone. |
| Outcome | Higher glycaemic qualification rate at successive follow-ups (e.g. 87.9% vs 81.9%; p=0.02) and lower post-lunch and post-dinner glucose, with higher self-efficacy and lower macrosomia (5% vs 15%; p=0.04). No significant difference in fasting or post-breakfast glucose. |
CBT dietary app in gestational diabetes
RCT · gestational diabetes · enrolment to delivery
A CBT-based dietary app raised the glycaemic qualification rate and cut macrosomia from 15% to 5%, but fasting and post-breakfast glucose were unchanged.
Expert Commentary
This is a sensible and clinically attractive trial, because the weak link in gestational diabetes management is rarely the dietary advice itself but adherence to it, and applying cognitive behavioural techniques to support that adherence is a logical move. The results are encouraging on the measures that matter: better glycaemic qualification, lower postprandial glucose after the two larger meals, and, most importantly, a meaningful reduction in macrosomia from 15% to 5%, a hard outcome with real consequences for mother and baby. I would keep two honest qualifiers in view. First, the benefit was selective, fasting and post-breakfast glucose did not differ, so this sharpened daytime postprandial control rather than transforming the whole profile. Second, it is a single-country, app-delivered intervention with about 15% attrition, and the macrosomia finding, while striking, comes from modest numbers. Can I use this with my patients? Yes, in principle. It supports pairing dietary instruction in gestational diabetes with structured behavioural support rather than information alone, and digital delivery makes that scalable, while I would temper expectations to postprandial control and await replication for the macrosomia benefit.
References
Pan Y, Tang J, Lu B, et al. Effects of cognitive behavioral therapy for diet on postprandial glucose and pregnancy outcomes in gestational diabetes mellitus: multicenter randomized controlled trial. J Med Internet Res. 2025;27:e71075. doi:10.2196/71075
