A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä

Sex as a determinant of type 1 diabetes at diagnosis




TekijätTurtinen M, Harkonen T, Parkkola A, Ilonen J, Knip M; the Finnish Pediatric Diabetes Register

KustantajaWILEY

Julkaisuvuosi2018

JournalPediatric Diabetes

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiPEDIATRIC DIABETES

Lehden akronyymiPEDIATR DIABETES

Vuosikerta19

Numero7

Aloitussivu1221

Lopetussivu1228

Sivujen määrä8

ISSN1399-543X

eISSN1399-5448

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/pedi.12697


Tiivistelmä
Objective The present study tested the hypothesis that girls have a more aggressive disease process than boys at the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes (T1D).Methods Demographic and clinical characteristics, the humoral autoantibody profile, and the genetic risk assessed by the presence of human leukocyte antigen DR-DQ haplotypes were analyzed in terms of sex in 4993 children and adolescents diagnosed with T1D between January 2003 and December 2016.Results A clear male preponderance (56.6%) was observed in our cohort and boys were significantly older than girls at clinical diagnosis (mean 8.3 vs 7.7years, P<.001). Age-adjusted analyses showed a poorer metabolic decompensation in girls than boys at diagnosis. Boys tested more often positive for autoantibodies against insulin autoantibodies (P = .008), islet antigen-2 autoantibodies (P = .033), and zinc transporter 8 autoantibodies (P = .027), whereas girls had a higher frequency of glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies (GADA) (P < .001) and higher GADA (P < .001) and islet cell antibody titers (P = .001). We did not find any significant differences in the genetic risk profile between girls and boys.Conclusions Our data show that the metabolic derangement is more severe in girls already at diagnosis of T1D and this finding is independent of age. The immunologic aggressiveness of the disease is more variable as the predominance of different autoantibodies varies between sexes with a higher frequency of GADA in girls, while the 3 other biochemical autoantibodies were more common in boys.



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