Increased metabolic risk in adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes: the EPICOM study

Aims/hypothesis We aimed to investigate metabolic risk factors, insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion in adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes compared with offspring of non-diabetic mothers. Methods During 1993–1999, pregnancies of women with type 1 diabetes in Denmark were prosp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diabetologia 2015-07, Vol.58 (7), p.1454-1463
Hauptverfasser: Vlachová, Zuzana, Bytoft, Birgitte, Knorr, Sine, Clausen, Tine D., Jensen, Rikke Beck, Mathiesen, Elisabeth R., Højlund, Kurt, Ovesen, Per, Beck-Nielsen, Henning, Gravholt, Claus H., Damm, Peter, Jensen, Dorte M.
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container_end_page 1463
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1454
container_title Diabetologia
container_volume 58
creator Vlachová, Zuzana
Bytoft, Birgitte
Knorr, Sine
Clausen, Tine D.
Jensen, Rikke Beck
Mathiesen, Elisabeth R.
Højlund, Kurt
Ovesen, Per
Beck-Nielsen, Henning
Gravholt, Claus H.
Damm, Peter
Jensen, Dorte M.
description Aims/hypothesis We aimed to investigate metabolic risk factors, insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion in adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes compared with offspring of non-diabetic mothers. Methods During 1993–1999, pregnancies of women with type 1 diabetes in Denmark were prospectively reported to a central registry in the Danish Diabetes Association. Data included information on maternal demography, diabetes status and pregnancy outcome. We invited 746 eligible children from this cohort (index offspring) to a follow-up examination. Control offspring were identified through The Danish Central Office of Civil Registration and matched with respect to date of birth, sex and postal code. Anthropometric measurements and blood sampling for metabolic characterisation, including an oral glucose tolerance test, were performed. Results We examined 278 index offspring (mean age 16.7 years; range 13.0–19.8 years) and 303 control offspring (mean age 16.8 years; range 13.5–20.4 years). Index offspring had higher BMI SD score (0.44: 95% CI 0.21, 0.66) compared with controls, after adjustments for pubertal development and maternal pre-pregnancy BMI. Furthermore, index offspring had a higher prevalence of components included in metabolic syndrome and prediabetes (impaired fasting glucose and/or impaired glucose tolerance), with reduced insulin sensitivity and relative insulin secretion deficiency, compared with controls. Maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy were not directly associated with offspring metabolic outcomes. Conclusions/interpretation Adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes had a less favourable metabolic profile and higher frequency of prediabetes than the background population. Significant associations between these outcomes and maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy could not be demonstrated. Trial registration : ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01559181
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00125-015-3589-5
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Methods During 1993–1999, pregnancies of women with type 1 diabetes in Denmark were prospectively reported to a central registry in the Danish Diabetes Association. Data included information on maternal demography, diabetes status and pregnancy outcome. We invited 746 eligible children from this cohort (index offspring) to a follow-up examination. Control offspring were identified through The Danish Central Office of Civil Registration and matched with respect to date of birth, sex and postal code. Anthropometric measurements and blood sampling for metabolic characterisation, including an oral glucose tolerance test, were performed. Results We examined 278 index offspring (mean age 16.7 years; range 13.0–19.8 years) and 303 control offspring (mean age 16.8 years; range 13.5–20.4 years). Index offspring had higher BMI SD score (0.44: 95% CI 0.21, 0.66) compared with controls, after adjustments for pubertal development and maternal pre-pregnancy BMI. Furthermore, index offspring had a higher prevalence of components included in metabolic syndrome and prediabetes (impaired fasting glucose and/or impaired glucose tolerance), with reduced insulin sensitivity and relative insulin secretion deficiency, compared with controls. Maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy were not directly associated with offspring metabolic outcomes. Conclusions/interpretation Adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes had a less favourable metabolic profile and higher frequency of prediabetes than the background population. Significant associations between these outcomes and maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy could not be demonstrated. 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Methods During 1993–1999, pregnancies of women with type 1 diabetes in Denmark were prospectively reported to a central registry in the Danish Diabetes Association. Data included information on maternal demography, diabetes status and pregnancy outcome. We invited 746 eligible children from this cohort (index offspring) to a follow-up examination. Control offspring were identified through The Danish Central Office of Civil Registration and matched with respect to date of birth, sex and postal code. Anthropometric measurements and blood sampling for metabolic characterisation, including an oral glucose tolerance test, were performed. Results We examined 278 index offspring (mean age 16.7 years; range 13.0–19.8 years) and 303 control offspring (mean age 16.8 years; range 13.5–20.4 years). Index offspring had higher BMI SD score (0.44: 95% CI 0.21, 0.66) compared with controls, after adjustments for pubertal development and maternal pre-pregnancy BMI. Furthermore, index offspring had a higher prevalence of components included in metabolic syndrome and prediabetes (impaired fasting glucose and/or impaired glucose tolerance), with reduced insulin sensitivity and relative insulin secretion deficiency, compared with controls. Maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy were not directly associated with offspring metabolic outcomes. Conclusions/interpretation Adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes had a less favourable metabolic profile and higher frequency of prediabetes than the background population. Significant associations between these outcomes and maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy could not be demonstrated. 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Methods During 1993–1999, pregnancies of women with type 1 diabetes in Denmark were prospectively reported to a central registry in the Danish Diabetes Association. Data included information on maternal demography, diabetes status and pregnancy outcome. We invited 746 eligible children from this cohort (index offspring) to a follow-up examination. Control offspring were identified through The Danish Central Office of Civil Registration and matched with respect to date of birth, sex and postal code. Anthropometric measurements and blood sampling for metabolic characterisation, including an oral glucose tolerance test, were performed. Results We examined 278 index offspring (mean age 16.7 years; range 13.0–19.8 years) and 303 control offspring (mean age 16.8 years; range 13.5–20.4 years). Index offspring had higher BMI SD score (0.44: 95% CI 0.21, 0.66) compared with controls, after adjustments for pubertal development and maternal pre-pregnancy BMI. Furthermore, index offspring had a higher prevalence of components included in metabolic syndrome and prediabetes (impaired fasting glucose and/or impaired glucose tolerance), with reduced insulin sensitivity and relative insulin secretion deficiency, compared with controls. Maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy were not directly associated with offspring metabolic outcomes. Conclusions/interpretation Adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes had a less favourable metabolic profile and higher frequency of prediabetes than the background population. Significant associations between these outcomes and maternal HbA 1c levels in pregnancy could not be demonstrated. Trial registration : ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01559181</abstract><cop>Berlin/Heidelberg</cop><pub>Springer Berlin Heidelberg</pub><pmid>25924986</pmid><doi>10.1007/s00125-015-3589-5</doi><tpages>10</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Anthropometry
Clinical medicine
Demography
Denmark - epidemiology
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 - epidemiology
Endocrinology
Epigenetics
European Continental Ancestry Group
Female
Gestational diabetes
Glucose
Glucose Tolerance Test
Glycated Hemoglobin A - analysis
Gynecology
Hospitals
Human Physiology
Humans
Hyperglycemia
Hypotheses
Insulin
Insulin - blood
Insulin Resistance
Internal Medicine
Male
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Metabolic Diseases
Metabolic Diseases - epidemiology
Metabolic syndrome
Mothers
Obesity
Obstetrics
Overweight
Pregnancy
Pregnancy in Diabetics
Pregnancy Outcome
Risk Factors
Womens health
Young Adult
title Increased metabolic risk in adolescent offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes: the EPICOM study
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