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Diabetes Care, Vol 2, Issue 2 65-76, Copyright © 1979 by American Diabetes Association
Standardization of definition, classification, and reporting in diabetes-related epidemiologic studies
KM West
This working paper reviews some advantages and disadvantages of various
alternative definitions and classification schemes. Certain of these
alternatives were discussed by an international group of experts on the
epidemiology of diabetes. It was recommended by the conferees that the
following terms not be used as standard descriptors in epidemiologic
reports: juvenile diabetes, juvenile-type diabetes, maturity-onset diabetes
of youth (MODY), latent diabetes, subclinical diabetes, clinical diabetes,
chemical diabetes, and J-type (Jamaica) diabetes. Alternative ways of
describing these conditions were offered. Some, but not all, conferees
favored abandonment or modification of the terms "secondary diabetes" and
"pancreatic diabetes." Two alternate approaches are described in
classification. One is designed to classify all types of cases in a single
scheme. In this system each case is described by indices that include
etiology and special etiologic concomitants, fatness, severity, type of
treatment, and, if present, special or peculiar manifestations, and
morbidity. This system makes it possible to classify all cases by mutually
exclusive categories. A disadvantage of this scheme is that the number of
combinations of classifying indices and subindices is great. Another
approach is to classify cases by syndromes, using in each class a mixture
of indices (e.g., etiology, severity, fatness, etc.). The conferees failed
to reach a consensus in the specifics of this approach. There was
considerable disagreement on how certain terms should be defined, whether
they should be used, and on the degree of need for specific definitions.
These designations included the terms "insulin-dependent," "idiopathic,"
"insulin-requiring," and "ketosis-prone." The conferees agreed that in
either of the two approaches to classification, the prime indices should be
those that can be ascertained by ordinary clinical methods. Much progress
could be accomplished, even in the absence of international standardized
definitions and classification systems, provided that authors keep in mind
the need to describe the major characteristics of their cases and define
the sense in which they use terms such as insulin-dependent, ketosis-prone,
obese, etc.

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Copyright © 1979 by the American Diabetes Association.
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