Hi
@LivT1D, congratulations on your pregnancy and welcome to the forums.
My children are 27 and 30 so I'm a bit out of date with modern T1 pregnancies, but I agree with
@Antje77 (thanks for the tag) that those levels are by no means out of control.
In my view it's a numbers game here. Some pregnancies (even in non diabetics) just aren't meant to be, and high blood sugars just push the odds a little bit more in that direction. If your baby isn't viable (lots of people, diabetic or not, have the pregnancy terminate before 12 weeks) then there isn't much you can do about it, but if it is then keeping your levels as normal as possible will reduce the chances of anything going wrong in later pregnancy.
The facts that you're only 26 and your levels are pretty good are all in your favour, hopefully your clinic will get you on folic acid and help tweak your levels further asap.
Both my T1 pregnancies were fine (though I had some awful hypos and really wish that cgms had been available then.) My T1 mother had an outrageously high hba1c when she first got pregnant (way too soon after a diagnosis via DKA) and as a consequence her first pregnancy ended in a stillbirth, but my brother and I were both born after a pregnancy without the benefit of glucometers, so even in those days T1s did have successful pregnancies without non diabetic hba1cs
Good luck, this forum is often a bit quiet but hopefully some younger T1 mums will post soon.