Revista de la Sociedad Argentina de Diabetes (Apr 2020)

TYPE 1 DIABETES MELLITUS: AGE OF ONSET AND PRESENCE IN FIRST-DEGREE RELATIVES

  • Eduardo Trinajstic,
  • Alejandra Cicchitti,
  • Joaquín González,
  • Celina Bertona,
  • Zelmira Guntsche,
  • Patricia Lemos,
  • Luciano Ortiz,
  • Eligio Negri,
  • Alfredo Bonadé,
  • Roxana Abeledo,
  • Romina Sosa,
  • Laura Dimov,
  • Gabriela Negri,
  • Martín Rodríguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.47196/diab.v54i1.175
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 1
pp. 15 – 20

Abstract

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Introduction: type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM1) is a childhood and adolescence disease, but it can occur at any age. The risk of developing DM1 is 8-15 times higher in first-degree relatives of patients with DM1. The proportion of affected first-degree relatives in children under 15 with DM1 is ≈12%. This frequency may increase to more than 20% after years of follow-up Materials and methods: a diagnosis of DM1 was defined in 414 subjects by phenotype, clinical judgment and early insulin requirement within the year of diagnosis. Age at diagnosis was determined and subjects were divided into those with debut before or after 30. The following variables were recorded and compared: presence of DM1 in first-degree relatives, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, HbA1c and association with hypothyroidism. t test and ANOVA for two or multiple subgroups comparison and chi square test with Fisher correction for quantitative or categorical variables were used. Results: the frequency of diabetes debut before the age of 10 was 28.2%, between 10 and 20 years 36.9%, between 20 and 30 years 18.8% and above 30 years 17.1%. The frequency of hypothyroidism and first-degree relatives with DM1 was similar in those diagnosed before or after 30 years. The presence of DM1 in first-degree relatives was found in 17.2% of the patients (father 3.6%, mother 3.1%, sibling 10.2%, son 0.5%). Conclusions: in 82.9% of patients debut was before the age of 30, but it was later in 17.1%. 17.2% of patients had first-degree relatives with DM1. We found the highest frequency of DM1 association among siblings (10.2%) similar to studies in adult DM1 populations but contrary to studies in children and adolescents. This family pattern was similar between DM1 beginning before or after 30 years.

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