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Erschienen in: International Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology 1/2013

Open Access 01.10.2013 | Oral presentation

Chinese childrens’ diabetes status, trends and hardship

verfasst von: Junfen Fu, Li Liang, Chunxiu Gong, Feng Xiong, Feihong Luo, Geli Liu, Pin Li, Li Liu, Ying Xin, Hui Yao, Lanwei Cui, Xing Shi, Yu Yang, Linqi Chen, Haiyan Wei

Erschienen in: International Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology | Sonderheft 1/2013

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Diabetes mellitus is now fast emerging as one of the biggest health catastrophes the world has ever witnessed. It has huge global and societal implications, particularly in developing countries such as China and India [1]. China is now bring with it potential massive increase in type 1 diabetes (2-5% per annum increases in incidence in the world's most populous countries) and childhood obesity (with its associated insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes)[2]. A nine-year prospective study on the incidence of childhood type 1 diabetes mellitus in China by the WHO DiaMond Project China Participating Center and Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine (CAPM) showed that between 1988 and 1996, the overall incidence rate (IR) was 0.59 per 100,000 person-year. The IR was 0.52/100,000 (95% CI: 0.50-0.54) for males and 0.66/100,000 (95% CI: 0.64-0.68) for females[3]. We recently conducted a nationwide study to evaluate the state and the trend of diabetes based on hospital inpatient data from China’s 14 medical centers and pre-diabetes among obese children from October 1995 through September 2010. We found that in the past 15 years, the prevalence of Chinese childhood diabetes increased dramatically and the growth of T2DM has exceeded T1DM. T1DM has occurrence rate of 89.6% of all diabetes and is still the dominant form of diabetes in children. The prevalence of T1DM was relatively stable from the year of 1995 to 2005, but increased obviously in the recent 5 years according to the hospital records in China. The clear increasing trend from Southwest to East and North disclosed strong regional differences (T1DM from 59.76 to 80.02 and 120.45, T2DM from 2.52 to 3.77 and 15.64 (1/100,000) (p all < 0.0001). Well developed areas had a higher prevalence compared to less developed areas {T1DM: 151.51 vs. 32.2; T2DM: 15.16 vs. 1.64 and other types: 7.54 vs. 0.42 (1/100,000)}. An important finding in this study is that the prevalence of childhood T2DM in China doubled from 4.1/100,000 in the first 5 years to 10.0/100,000 in the recent 5 years, which was 7.44 % of total diabetics. Though the ratio is still lower than that of America (8%-46%)[4] , the trend is clear and the consequences are serious because China has the largest population in the world. Another important finding in this study showed obese children are potential pools of T2DM. Of the 3153 obese children, 18.24% had IFG alone, 5.99% had IGT, 4% had combined IFG and IGT.

Acknowledgements

This study was supported by the National Key Technology R&D Program of China (2012BAI02B03) , Zhejiang provincial key disciplines of medicine (Innovation discipline, 11-CX24) and Zhejiang Province key scientific and technological innovation team (2010R50050)
This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​2.​0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Zurück zum Zitat Meetoo D, McGovern P, Safadi R: An epidemiological overview of diabetes across the world. Br J Nurs. 2007, 16 (16): 1002-7.CrossRefPubMed Meetoo D, McGovern P, Safadi R: An epidemiological overview of diabetes across the world. Br J Nurs. 2007, 16 (16): 1002-7.CrossRefPubMed
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Metadaten
Titel
Chinese childrens’ diabetes status, trends and hardship
verfasst von
Junfen Fu
Li Liang
Chunxiu Gong
Feng Xiong
Feihong Luo
Geli Liu
Pin Li
Li Liu
Ying Xin
Hui Yao
Lanwei Cui
Xing Shi
Yu Yang
Linqi Chen
Haiyan Wei
Publikationsdatum
01.10.2013
Verlag
BioMed Central
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-9856-2013-S1-O13

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