Abstract

Type 1 diabetes with onset in childhood (0-14.9 years) represents one of the most frequent chronic diseases in children and young adults. Norway has one of the highest incidences of childhood onset type 1 diabetes in the world. Before introduction of insulin therapy in 1922, few children survived more than one to two years after clinical onset. When insulin came available, a major shift occurred in the distribution of causes of death in type 1 diabetic patients away from diabetic coma, which dominated the pre-insulin era, to renal and cardiac diseases. The disease is related to a significant burden to society and patients because most cases require lifelong treatment with insulin as well as day-to-day monitoring. Type 1 diabetes also confers increased risk of severe late complications such as renal failure, blindness, amputations, heart disease and stroke. Despite advances in diabetes treatment, type 1 diabetes is still associated with considerable premature mortality resulting from acute and chronic complications of diabetes and an increase in mortality at every age. Although the main cause of death in type 1 diabetes is long-term complications, an excess death rate has also been reported in subjects with short duration without signs of long-term complications.

Highlights

  • Third to Finland and Sweden, Norway has the highest incidence of childhood onset type 1 diabetes in the world [1]

  • Mortality has mainly been related to acute complications such as diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) and severe hypoglycemia [5,6,11]

  • Childhood-onset type 1 diabetes still carries an increased mortality risk when compared with the non-diabetic population in Norway

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Third to Finland and Sweden, Norway has the highest incidence of childhood onset type 1 diabetes in the world [1]. More than 300 children are diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in Norway each year, the annual incidence rate is 33-36/100 000 [2]. Death after diabetes duration of 20 years has been related to renal complications and cardiovascular disease [4,6,9, 10]. One Norwegian study has documented a considerably increased risk of total and cardiovascular death in a young cohort of patients with childhood-onset type 1 diabetes, diagnosed in 1973-1982, after 24 years diabetes duration [6]. When the cohort was divided in death before and after 30 years of age, the main death cause was acute complications in early years and cardiovascular events after the age of 30 years

Deaths at onset
Risk factors for premature death
Increased relative mortality
Findings
CONCLUSION
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