Diabetes Care, Vol 17, Issue 7 653-656, Copyright © 1994 by American Diabetes Association
Low-birth-weight infants show earlier onset of IDDM
N Khan and JJ Couper
Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Adelaide Children's Hospital, South Australia.
OBJECTIVE--Pancreatic beta-cell mass increases rapidly during gestation and
early infancy. Infants who are small for gestational age, which is a marker
for poor intrauterine nutrition, have reduced beta-cell mass. We examined
whether weight and length in early infancy, and in inference beta-cell
mass, is related to age at onset of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
(IDDM). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--Data from infant records of 232
patients with IDDM, including birth weight, birth length, gestational age,
weight at 6 months of age, and feeding history during the first 6 months of
life, were analyzed. Maternal recall was not used for data collection.
RESULTS--Low-birth-weight infants (<2.5 kg) showed a significantly
earlier onset of diabetes (4.3 [3.2-6.0] years vs. 9.0 [5.3-11.8] years,
median [25-75th percentile]; P < 0.0001). Infants small for gestational
age also had earlier onset than those with birth weight above the 10th
percentile after correction for gestational age (6.2 [3.6-10.5] vs. 9.2
[5.4-11.8] years; P < 0.0001). Infants with corrected birth weight:
length ratio below the 10th percentile had earlier onset, as did infants
with corrected 6-months weight below the 10th percentile (4.9 [2.8-6.0]
years vs. 8.8 [5.2-11.8] years; P < 0.0001). Infants who were
exclusively breast-fed for 6 months showed a slightly later onset of
diabetes than those who were bottle- or mixed-fed, independent of weight
(9.4 [5.0-11.3] years vs. 8.3 [4.2-11.7] years; P < 0.0001).
CONCLUSIONS--Weight and growth parameters in utero and early infancy may
influence the age at onset of IDDM. beta-cell mass is likely to be a
significant factor.