“…To assign the maternal diabetes as the cause, the mother had to have evidence of type 1 or 2 pregestational diabetes mellitus and to have delivered a fetus or infant with one or more of the following selected DRMs based on convincing evidence in the literature (Correa et al, 2008; Miller et al, 2010; Castori, 2013; Oyen et al, 2016;Nasri et al, 2018; Ryan et al, 2019; Chen et al, 2019; Nalbandyan et al, 2019; Tinker et al, 2020): sacral agenesis/caudal dysgenesis, femoral aplasia/hypoplasia, multiple vertebral defects, holoprosencephaly, heterotaxy, conotruncal heart malformations, bilateral renal defects (renal a/dysplasia), microtia, and anencephaly. All cases of sacral agenesis (full or partial) and caudal dysgenesis were lumped together into a single category (Nalbandyan et al, 2019). In the determination there were seven cases where the mother had apparent gestational diabetes and the infant had the most typical of DRMs, that is, caudal dysgenesis or femoral hypoplasia syndrome (Castori, 2013; Nasri et al, 2018); we elected to include these cases under the assumption that based on the distinctive outcome, these mothers had pregestational diabetes.…”