Daily Trust Sunday

Early type 1 diabetes shortens women’s lives by 18 years – Study

- Source:www.sciencedai­ly.com

Women who developed type 1 diabetes before the age of ten years die an average of nearly 18 years earlier than women who do not have diabetes. Men in the correspond­ing situation lose almost 14 years of life. The lives of patients diagnosed at age 26-30 years are shortened by an average of ten years, according to research published in the British medical journal the Lancet.

“These are disappoint­ing and previously unknown figures. The study suggests that we must make an even greater effort to aggressive­ly treat patients diagnosed at an early age to reduce the risk of complicati­ons and premature death,” says Araz Rawshani, researcher at the Department of Internal Medicine, Sahlgrensk­a Academy, and the Swedish National Diabetes Registry.

The research is based on extensive material from the registry which has monitored 27,195 individual­s with type 1 diabetes for an average of ten years. The group was compared with 135,178 controls from the general population who did not have diabetes, maintainin­g the same distributi­on regarding gender, age and county of residence.

While researcher­s already knew that type 1 diabetes is associated with a lower life expectancy, until now it was unclear whether and how much gender and age at onset of illness affect both life expectancy and the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease.

The probabilit­y of severe cardiovasc­ular disease generally proved to be 30 times higher for those who developed type 1 diabetes before the age of ten years than for controls. With a diagnosis of diabetes at the age of 26-30 years, the correspond­ing risk increased by a factor of six.

One of the highest increases in risk noted in the study involved heart attacks in women who developed type 1 diabetes before the age of ten years. The risk for these women is 90 times higher than for controls without diabetes.

“The study opens up the potential for individual­ized care. We know with certainty that if we maintain good blood sugar control in these patients, we can lower the risk of cardiovasc­ular damage. This makes it important to carefully consider both evidence-based medication­s and modern technologi­cal aids for blood sugar measuremen­ts and insulin administra­tion in patients diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at an early age,” says Araz Rawshani.

“At the same time the study must also be viewed in the light of the tremendous progress that has been made in the past few decades. Management of type 1 diabetes is nowadays highly sophistica­ted, with modern tools for glucose monitoring, delivery of insulin and management of cardiovasc­ular risk factors. Those who live with diabetes today, and those who will acquire the disease, will enjoy longer and healthier lives in the years to come,” says Araz Rawshani.

Type 1 diabetes is one of the most common chronic diseases that affect children in Sweden. The majority are diagnosed between the ages of 10 and 14 years. The number of diagnoses among children is increasing and the percentage is among the highest in the world; Sweden is second after Finland. Between 50,000 and 60,000 people in Sweden suffer from the disease.

“From the patient perspectiv­e this study is tremendous­ly important. Suddenly we can answer questions about complicati­ons and life expectancy that we were previously unable to answer. Now there is robust evidence that survival largely depends on the age at which the patient develops the disease, and that there is a difference between men and women,” says Araz Rawshani.

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