Scimex: A Swedish study that looked at the health of more than 1.2 million
children in Sweden, has found that overweight and obese mothers increase
the risk of their kids developing type 1 diabetes (T1D). Mothers with a
high body mass index (BMI) during their first trimester increased the
risk of T1D in their children by 33 per cent, compared to mothers who
had a BMI within the normal range during the same trimester.
A study of more than 1.2 million children in Sweden has concluded
that children of parents with any type of diabetes are more likely to
develop type 1 diabetes (T1D), and that maternal overweight and obesity
increases the risk of the child developing T1D when neither parent has
diabetes.
The results, published in Diabetologia (the journal of
the European Association for the Study of Diabetes), clearly suggest
that strategies to reduce overweight and obesity before and during
pregnancy could reduce the incidence of T1D, which is currently
increasing in children (and especially in younger children) in most
countries of the world. The research is by Associate Professor Tahereh
Moradi, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and colleagues.
The
study cohort comprised 1,263,358 children, born in Sweden between 1992
and 2004. Children were followed from birth until diagnosis of T1D,
emigration, death
or end of follow-up in 2009, whichever occurred first. Body mass index
(BMI) was calculated for the first trimester of the mother's pregnancy.
A total of 5,771 children were diagnosed with type 1 diabetes during the study period. Of
those, 5,155 children had both parents born inside Nordic countries,
including Sweden, and 322 had both parents born outside Nordic
countries, and a further 294 had one parent born in a Nordic country and
the other born outside. Nordic countries are Sweden, Norway, Finland,
Denmark and Iceland.
Risk of T1D was increased in offspring of
parents with any type of diabetes regardless of parental ethnicity. In
Nordic families (for which there was most data), having a father with
any type of diabetes increased the risk of T1D in the child by five
times, while having a mother with any type of diabetes increased the
risk of T1D in the child by around three times.
High first
trimester maternal BMI (meaning 30 kg/m2 or higher, classed as obese)
was associated with a 33% increased risk of type 1 diabetes only in
offspring of parents without diabetes when compared with maternal BMI in
the normal range (18.5 to 25). The authors explain: "The finding that
first trimester maternal obesity was a risk factor for type 1 diabetes
only in offspring of parents without diabetes, and that maternal obesity
caused no 'extra' risk in offspring of parents with diabetes, clearly
suggests that heredity for type 1 diabetes is the strongest risk factor
of the two for development of type 1 diabetes in the next generation."
They
conclude: "This population-based study from Sweden demonstrates
significantly increased risks of type 1 diabetes in offspring of both
mothers and fathers with diabetes and regardless of parental migration
background. The highest risks were noted in offspring of mothers and
fathers with type 1 diabetes. Furthermore, maternal overweight and
obesity in early pregnancy was associated with increased risk of type 1
diabetes in the offspring of parents without diabetes. Therefore
prevention of overweight and obesity in women of reproductive
age—currently increasing in all countries—may contribute to a decreased
incidence of type 1 diabetes."