Abstract

ObjectiveThe “accelerator hypothesis” predicts early onset of Type 1 diabetes (T1D) in heavier children. Studies testing direction of correlation between body mass index (BMI) and age at onset of T1D in different continental populations have reported differing results–inverse, direct, and neutral. Evaluating the correlation in diverse ethnic populations is required to generalize the accelerator hypothesis.MethodsThe study cohort comprised 474 Kuwaiti children of Arab ethnicity diagnosed with T1D at age 6 to 18 years during 2011–2013. Age- and sex-adjusted BMI z-scores were calculated by comparing the BMI measured at diagnosis with Kuwaiti pediatric population reference data recorded during comparable time-period. Multiple linear regression and Pearson correlation analyses were performed.ResultsBMI z-score was seen inversely associated with onset age (r,-0.28; p-value<0.001). Children with BMI z-score>0 (i.e. BMI >national average) showed a stronger correlation (r,-0.38; p-value<0.001) than those with BMI z-score<0 (r,-0.19; p-value<0.001); the former group showed significantly lower mean onset age than the latter group (9.6±2.4 versus 10.5±2.7; p-value<0.001). Observed inverse correlation was consistent with that seen in Anglo-saxon, central european, caucasian, and white children while inconsistent with that seen in Indian, New Zealander, and Australian children.ConclusionsThe accelerator hypothesis generalizes in Arab pediatric population from Kuwait.

Highlights

  • The “Accelerator Hypothesis” [1, 2] proposes three processes that accelerate the rate of beta cell loss

  • Observed inverse correlation was consistent with that seen in Anglo-saxon, central european, caucasian, and white children while inconsistent with that seen in Indian, New Zealander, and Australian children

  • The accelerator hypothesis generalizes in Arab pediatric population from Kuwait

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Summary

Introduction

The “Accelerator Hypothesis” [1, 2] proposes three processes that accelerate the rate of beta cell loss. The three accelerators include (i) constitutionally high rate of beta-cell apoptosis, (ii) insulin resistance, and (iii) beta cell autoimmunity. Gain of excess weight deems to be central to the rising incidence of diabetes and onset of diabetes in early age. Similar studies on Type 1 diabetes (T1D) in several populations (including United States of America, United Kingdom, Central Europe, Spain, India, New Zealand, and Australia [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]), revealed, unlike in the case of T2D, varied results on the direction (i.e. direct, inverse or neutral) and degree of correlations between BMI and age at onset. Populations from the Arabian Peninsula, such as that of Kuwait which has fourth highest incidence of childhood T1D in the world [22], are underrepresented in such studies

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