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1.
Diabetologia ; 56(7): 1512-9, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23624530

ABSTRACT

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Monogenic diabetes (MD) might be misdiagnosed as type 1 diabetes. The prevalence of MD among children with apparent type 1 diabetes has not been established. Our aim was to estimate the prevalence of common forms of MD in childhood diabetes. METHODS: We investigated 2,756 children aged 0-14 years with newly diagnosed diabetes who had been recruited to the nationwide population-based Norwegian Childhood Diabetes Registry (NCDR), from July 2002 to March 2012. Completeness of ascertainment was 91%. Children diagnosed with diabetes who were under12 months of age were screened for mutations in KCNJ11, ABCC8 and INS. Children without GAD and protein tyrosine phosphatase-like protein antibodies were screened in two ways. Those who had a parent with diabetes were screened for mutations in HNF1A, HNF4A, INS and MT-TL1. Children with HbA1c <7.5% (<58 mmol/mol) and no insulin requirement were screened for mutations in GCK. Finally, we searched the Norwegian MODY Registry for children with genetically verified MD. RESULTS: We identified 15 children harbouring a mutation in HNF1A, nine with one in GCK, four with one in KCNJ11, one child with a mutation in INS and none with a mutation in MT-TL1. The minimum prevalence of MD in the NCDR was therefore 1.1%. By searching the Norwegian MODY Registry, we found 24 children with glucokinase-MODY, 15 of whom were not present in the NCDR. We estimated the minimum prevalence of MD among Norwegian children to be 3.1/100,000. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: This is the first prevalence study of the common forms of MD in a nationwide, population-based registry of childhood diabetes. We found that 1.1% of patients in the Norwegian Childhood Diabetes Registry had MD.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/genetics , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Glucokinase/genetics , Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 1-alpha/genetics , Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4/genetics , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Mutation , Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying/genetics , Registries , Sulfonylurea Receptors/genetics
2.
BMJ ; 323(7323): 1213-7, 2001 Nov 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11719411

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether mothers and fathers have a higher long term risk of death, particularly from cardiovascular disease and cancer, after the mother has had pre-eclampsia. DESIGN: Population based cohort study of registry data. SUBJECTS: Mothers and fathers of all 626 272 births that were the mothers' first deliveries, recorded in the Norwegian medical birth registry from 1967 to 1992. Parents were divided into two cohorts based on whether the mother had pre-eclampsia during the pregnancy. Subjects were also stratified by whether the birth was term or preterm, given that pre-eclampsia might be more severe in preterm pregnancies. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Total mortality and mortality from cardiovascular causes, cancer, and stroke from 1967 to 1992, from data from the Norwegian registry of causes of death. RESULTS: Women who had pre-eclampsia had a 1.2-fold higher long term risk of death (95% confidence interval 1.02 to 1.37) than women who did not have pre-eclampsia. The risk in women with pre-eclampsia and a preterm delivery was 2.71-fold higher (1.99 to 3.68) than in women who did not have pre-eclampsia and whose pregnancies went to term. In particular, the risk of death from cardiovascular causes among women with pre-eclampsia and a preterm delivery was 8.12-fold higher (4.31 to 15.33). However, these women had a 0.36-fold (not significant) decreased risk of cancer. The long term risk of death was no higher among the fathers of the pre-eclamptic pregnancies than the fathers of pregnancies in which pre-eclampsia did not occur. CONCLUSIONS: Genetic factors that increase the risk of cardiovascular disease may also be linked to pre-eclampsia. A possible genetic contribution from fathers to the risk of pre-eclampsia was not reflected in increased risks of death from cardiovascular causes or cancer among fathers.


Subject(s)
Pre-Eclampsia/mortality , Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality , Cohort Studies , Fathers/statistics & numerical data , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Male , Maternal Mortality , Neoplasms/mortality , Norway/epidemiology , Obstetric Labor, Premature , Pre-Eclampsia/genetics , Pregnancy , Registries , Risk Assessment , Stroke/mortality , Survival Rate
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