Article

Being born in Sweden increases the risk for type 1 diabetes - a study of migration of children to Sweden as a natural experiment.

School of Health and Medical Sciences, Örebro University, Sweden.
Acta Paediatrica (impact factor: 2.07). 07/2011; 101(1):73-7. DOI:10.1111/j.1651-2227.2011.02410.x
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT To investigate whether the age of first exposure to a high-incidence country like Sweden determines the risk of T1DM in children with an origin in a low incidence region of the world.
Register study in a Swedish study population in the age 6-25 years in three categories of residents with an origin in low incidence regions of T1DM (Eastern Europe, East Asia, South Asia and Latin America); 24,252 international adoptees; 47,986 immigrants and 40,971 Swedish-born with two foreign-born parents and a comparison group of 1,770,092 children with Swedish-born parents. Retrieval of a prescription of insulin during 2006 was used as an indicator of T1DM and analysed with logistic regression.
The odds ratios (OR) for T1DM were lower than the Swedish majority population for residents with an origin in the four low incidence regions. Being Swedish-born implied a higher risk for T1DM in the four low incidence study groups compared with the internationally adopted with an OR of 1.68 (CI 1.03-2.73).
Being born in Sweden increases the risk for T1DM in children with an origin in low incidence countries. This may imply that exposures in utero or very early infancy are important risk factors for T1DM.

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Keywords

24,252 international adoptees
 
East Asia
 
Eastern Europe
 
first exposure
 
four low incidence regions
 
four low incidence study groups
 
high-incidence country
 
higher risk
 
Latin America
 
logistic regression
 
low incidence countries
 
low incidence region
 
low incidence regions
 
odds ratios
 
Register study
 
South Asia
 
Sweden increases
 
Swedish majority population
 
Swedish study population
 
Swedish-born parents