Chicago: A childs blood pressure, body mass index, blood glucose level and
other laboratory tests and simple office measures may predict the risk of
developing type 2 diabetes nine and 26 years later, according to a report in the
January issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the
JAMA/Archives journals.
In the past 25 years, the prevalences of obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus have
increased concomitantly, and the age at onset of type 2 diabetes mellitus has
dropped precipitously, especially in black females, the authors write as background
information in the article. Models to identify children at high and low risk of type 2
diabetes could provide diagnostic and therapeutic insights and help clinicians
target prevention efforts.
John A. Morrison, Ph.D., of Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center, and
colleagues analyzed data from two studies. The National Growth and Health Study
followed 1,067 black and white girls enrolled at ages 9 and 10 for nine years, and
the Princeton Follow-up Study tracked 822 black and white schoolchildren for 22 to
30 years beginning in 1973 to 1976.
In the Princeton Follow-up Study, individuals were more likely to have diabetes at
age 39 years if they had high systolic (top number) blood pressure, a high body
mass index, glucose levels of at least 100 milligrams per deciliter, low high-density
lipoprotein (HDL, or good cholesterol) levels and high triglyceride levels in
childhood. When body mass index, systolic blood pressure and diastolic [bottom
number] blood pressure were all lower than the 75th percentile and there was no
parental diabetes mellitus, the likelihood of children developing type 2 diabetes
mellitus 22 to 30 years later was only 1 percent, the authors write.
In the National Growth and Health Study, childhood high systolic blood pressure,
insulin concentration and having a parent with diabetes increased the risk of having
diabetes at age 19. If childhood body mass index, systolic blood pressure and
diastolic blood pressure were all lower than the 75th percentile, the likelihood of
type 2 diabetes mellitus at age 19 years was 0.2 percent, 0.2 percent if the parents
were also free of diabetes mellitus and 0.3 percent if childhood insulin was also
less than the 75th percentile, the authors write.
Our data have practical clinical value in assessment of pre-teenaged and teenaged
children, since children with systolic blood pressure, triglyceride, body mass index
and insulin in the top fifth percentile, a glucose concentration of at least 100
milligrams per deciliter and a parent with diabetes could be targeted for primary
prevention of type 2 diabetes mellitus through diet, exercise and possibly insulin-
sensitizing drug intervention, with special focus on overweight children with positive
family history of diabetes mellitus, they conclude.
Contact: Kristie Luebbe
513-686-3014
kristie.luebbe@healthall.com.
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