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Clinical and demographic risk factors associated with mortality during early adulthood in a population-based cohort of childhood-onset Type 1 diabetes

This paper reports calculated standardized mortality ratios in patients with Type 1 diabetes, and assesses the association between poor management of...

Authors:
Cooper MN, de Klerk NH, Jones TW, Davis EA

Authors notes:
Diabetic Medicine. 2014;31(12):1550-1558

Keywords:
standardized mortality ratios, paediatrics, mortality, population-based cohort, Type 1 diabetes, Cox proportional hazard models

Abstract:
Our aim was to calculate standardized mortality ratios and to assess the association between paediatric clinical factors and higher risk of mortality during early adulthood in a population-based cohort of subjects with Type 1 diabetes.

Subjects with Type 1 diabetes were identified through the Western Australian Children's Diabetes Database and clinical data for those who reached 18 years of age (n = 1309) were extracted.

An age- and sex-matched (without diabetes) comparison cohort (n = 6451) was obtained from the birth registry.

Mortality records were obtained from the death registry. Participants were followed up until 31 January 2012.

Associations of clinical factors (from clinic visits before 18 years of age) with mortality were assessed using Cox proportional hazard models.

The standardized mortality ratio for all-cause mortality was 1.7 for male and 10.1 for female subjects with Type 1 diabetes (median age at end of study 25.6 years).

The adjusted hazard ratio was 1.5 for a 1% increase in mean paediatric HbA1c level, 3.8 for four episodes of severe hypoglycaemia relative to zero episodes, and 6.21 for a low-level socio-economic background relative to a high-level background.

People with childhood-onset Type 1 diabetes have higher mortality rates in early adulthood.

At particularly high risk are women, those with a history of poor HbA1c levels, those with recurrent severe hypoglycaemia during paediatric management, and those from a low socio-economic background.

These groups may benefit from intensified management during transition from paediatric to adult care facilities.