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Impact of maternal country of birth on type-1-Diabetes therapy and outcome in 27,643 children and adolescents from the DPV registry

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peer-reviewed

Erstveröffentlichung
2015-08-21
Authors
Scheuing, Nicole
Wiegand, Susanna
Bächle, Christina
Fröhlich-Reiterer, Elke
Hahn, Eva
et al.
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel


Published in
Plos One ; 10 (2015), 8. - Art.-Nr. e0135178. - ISSN 1932-6203
Link to original publication
https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0135178
Faculties
Medizinische Fakultät
Institutions
Institut für Epidemiologie und Medizinische Biometrie
External cooperations
Charité Universitätsmedizin
Deutsches Zentrum für Diabetesforschung (DZD)
Medizinische Universität Graz
Evangelisches Krankenhaus Oberhausen
Mutterhaus der Borromäerinnen
et al.
Document version
published version (publisher's PDF)
Abstract
Objective: To study the impact of maternal country of birth on type-1-diabetes (T1D) therapy and outcome. Study Design and Methods: 27,643 T1D patients aged ≤20 years with documented maternal country of birth from the multicenter German/Austrian diabetes patient registry (DPV) were analyzed. Patients were categorized based on their mother’s origin: Germany/Austria (reference), Turkey, Southern Europe, and Eastern Europe. To compare BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS), diabetes therapy and outcome between groups, multivariable regression was applied with adjustments for age, sex and duration of diabetes. Based on observed marginal frequencies, adjusted estimates were calculated. Linear regression was used for continuous data, logistic regression for binary data and Poisson regression for count data. All statistical analyses were performed using SAS 9.4. Significance was set at a two-tailed p<0.05. Results: 83.3% of patients were offspring of native mothers. A Turkish, Southern or Eastern European background was documented in 2.4%, 1.7% and 4.3% of individuals. After demographic adjustment, patients with migration background had a higher mean BMI-SDS (Turkey, Southern Europe or Eastern Europe vs. Germany/Austria: 0.58±0.03, 0.40±0.04, or 0.37±0.02 vs. 0.31±0.01; ±SE) and a lower use of insulin pumps (26.8%, 27.9%, or 32.6% vs. 37.9%) compared to offspring of native mothers. Mean HbA1c was worst in individuals of Turkish mothers (Turkey vs. Germany/Austria: 69.7±0.7 vs. 66.6±0.1 mmol/mol; ±SE). Patients of Eastern European descent had an increased rate of severe hypoglycemia (22.09±0.13 vs. 16.13±0.02 events per 100 patient-years) and ketoacidosis was more prevalent in offspring of Turkish or Southern European mothers (7.50±0.10, or 7.13±0.11 vs. 6.54±0.02 events per 100 patient-years). Patients of Turkish descent were more often hospitalized (57.2±2.7 vs. 48.5±0.4 per 100 patient-years). All differences were significant. Conclusion: The differences in diabetes therapy and outcome among patients with distinct migration background suggest that specific challenges have to be considered in clinical care.
EU Project uulm
DIRECT / DIabetes REsearCh on patient sTratification / EC / FP7 / 115317
Subject headings
[GND]: Diabetes mellitus Typ 1 | Therapie | Gesundheitskompetenz | Insulin
[MeSH]: Diabetes mellitus, Type 1 | Diabetes mellitus; Therapy | Health literacy | Insulin
[Free subject headings]: Diabetes outcome | Maternal country of birth | Hvidoere study-group | Metabolic-control | Diabetic children | Immigrant status | Risk
[DDC subject group]: DDC 610 / Medicine & health
License
CC BY 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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DOI & citation

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-33216

Scheuing, Nicole et al. (2020): Impact of maternal country of birth on type-1-Diabetes therapy and outcome in 27,643 children and adolescents from the DPV registry. Open Access Repositorium der Universität Ulm und Technischen Hochschule Ulm. http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-33216
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