Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics
Neonatal hyperglycaemia most commonly affects babies who are at higher risk due to specific circumstances at birth. Not every newborn requires immediate blood sugar testing, but certain groups of infants need close monitoring from the moment they are born. Understanding who should be tested and when can help identify problems before they become serious.[1]
Healthcare providers typically recommend blood glucose testing for very low-birth-weight infants, particularly those weighing less than 1.5 kilograms. These tiny babies have immature body systems that struggle to regulate blood sugar properly. Their bodies may not produce enough insulin, the hormone that helps cells use sugar for energy, or they may have difficulty responding to the insulin they do produce. This makes them vulnerable to developing dangerously high blood sugar levels, especially during the first few days of life when they are receiving intravenous fluids, which are fluids given directly into a vein through a tube.[1][6]
Babies who are born prematurely face similar challenges. The earlier a baby is born, the higher the risk of blood sugar problems. In premature infants, the system that converts proinsulin (an early form of insulin) into active insulin may not work properly. Additionally, their bodies may be resistant to insulin, meaning the hormone cannot do its job effectively. These infants need careful glucose monitoring, particularly during the critical first week after birth when hyperglycaemia most commonly appears.[1][6]
Infants experiencing significant physical stress should also undergo diagnostic testing. Stress can come from many sources, including surgery, difficulty breathing, infections throughout the body known as sepsis, or reduced oxygen supply called hypoxia. When babies face these challenges, their bodies release stress hormones like epinephrine and norepinephrine. These hormones interfere with insulin production and action, causing blood sugar levels to rise. Fungal sepsis poses a particularly high risk for hyperglycaemia.[1][6]
Small-for-gestational-age infants represent another group that requires close monitoring. These babies did not grow as expected in the womb, a condition called intrauterine growth restriction. They may develop a rare, self-limiting condition called transient neonatal diabetes mellitus, which causes high blood sugar but usually resolves within a few weeks. Although this condition is temporary, it still requires prompt identification and management to prevent complications.[1]
Diagnostic Methods
The primary method for diagnosing neonatal hyperglycaemia is straightforward: testing the level of glucose in the baby’s blood. This test can be performed using either a blood sample taken from a vein, called serum glucose testing, or using whole blood. The diagnosis is confirmed when serum glucose exceeds 150 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL), which equals 8.3 millimoles per litre (mmol/L), or when whole blood glucose rises above 125 mg/dL (6.9 mmol/L). These numbers apply to all newborns regardless of how early they were born or how long they have been alive.[1][6]
Healthcare providers typically consider the safe target range for a newborn’s blood glucose to be between 70 and 150 mg/dL. This safety threshold was established based on research into how premature babies’ kidneys handle glucose. When blood sugar rises above certain levels, the kidneys begin to filter glucose out of the blood and into the urine. Understanding this threshold helps doctors know when blood sugar levels have become problematic.[6]
Testing often happens multiple times during the first days of life, particularly in high-risk infants. The frequency of testing depends on various factors, including the baby’s weight, gestational age, and whether they are showing any concerning signs. For babies receiving intravenous fluids containing dextrose, a form of sugar, healthcare providers may perform blood glucose checks several times daily to ensure levels remain within the safe range. If blood sugar readings begin to climb, more frequent testing helps doctors adjust treatment quickly.[1]
Beyond the basic blood glucose measurement, additional laboratory findings can help confirm the diagnosis and assess its severity. Doctors may test the baby’s urine for the presence of glucose, a condition called glycosuria. Normally, kidneys reabsorb all filtered glucose back into the bloodstream, so urine should contain little to no sugar. When glucose appears in the urine, it indicates that blood sugar levels have exceeded the kidney’s ability to reabsorb it all. In newborns, particularly premature ones, glucose typically begins spilling into urine when blood levels rise above 12 to 13 mmol/L. The presence of significant glycosuria, defined as 3+ on dipstick testing or greater than 56 mmol/L of glucose in urine, suggests more severe hyperglycaemia.[1][5]
Another important measurement is serum hyperosmolarity, which refers to an abnormally high concentration of particles dissolved in the blood. Normal serum osmolarity ranges from 275 to 292 millimoles per kilogram. Each 1 mmol/L increase in blood glucose raises osmolarity by 1 mmol/L. When blood sugar becomes very high, the blood essentially becomes too concentrated, drawing water out of cells and potentially causing serious problems. Measuring osmolarity helps doctors understand how severely the high blood sugar is affecting the baby’s body chemistry. Significant osmolar changes rarely occur with blood glucose levels below 20 mmol/L, which is why doctors may use different treatment thresholds depending on how high the glucose rises.[1][5]
When hyperglycaemia appears unexpectedly, particularly in babies whose intravenous glucose infusion rate has not changed, doctors must investigate further to identify the underlying cause. This diagnostic detective work is crucial because the symptoms and signs of neonatal hyperglycaemia typically reflect the underlying disorder rather than the high blood sugar itself. Healthcare providers will look for evidence of infection, checking for sepsis or a serious intestinal condition called necrotizing enterocolitis. They may also review whether the baby recently underwent surgery, experienced breathing difficulties, or received medications that could affect glucose levels.[1][6]
For babies born small for their gestational age who develop persistent hyperglycaemia, doctors may consider whether transient neonatal diabetes mellitus is the cause. This rare condition results from genetic changes that affect insulin production. Unlike hyperglycaemia caused by medical treatments or stress, transient neonatal diabetes typically lasts several weeks before resolving on its own. Genetic testing can help confirm this diagnosis, distinguishing it from other forms of high blood sugar in newborns.[1]
Distinguishing neonatal hyperglycaemia from other conditions is also important. The most common mistake is confusing it with Type 1 diabetes, which typically develops in older children. While both conditions involve problems with insulin and high blood sugar, neonatal hyperglycaemia usually appears within the first six months of life, whereas Type 1 diabetes rarely occurs this early. Genetic testing can help differentiate between these conditions, as neonatal diabetes often results from mutations in a single gene, making it what doctors call a monogenetic disease.[6]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
The provided sources do not contain specific information about diagnostic tests and methods used as standard criteria for enrolling patients with neonatal hyperglycaemia in clinical trials. Clinical research in this area would likely require the same basic diagnostic confirmation of elevated blood glucose levels, but details about clinical trial inclusion criteria, specialized screening procedures, or additional qualification testing are not available in the source material.


