scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The Swedish childhood diabetes study. Vaccinations and infections as risk determinants for diabetes in childhood.

TLDR
A protective effect of measles vaccination for Type 1 diabetes in childhood is indicated as well as a possible causal relationship between the onset of the disease and the total load of recent infections.
Abstract
In a nationwide incident case referent study we have evaluated vaccinations, early and recent infections and the use of medicines as possible risk determinants for Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus in childhood. A total of 339 recently onset diabetic and 528 referent children, age 0–14 years, were included. Information about infections was collected from a mailed questionnaire and about vaccinations from childhood health care centres and schools. When vaccinations were considered as possible risk factors for diabetes, a significant decrease in relative risk estimated as odds ratio (OR) was noted for measles vaccination (OR=0.69; 95% confidence limits 0.48–0.98). For vaccination against tuberculosis, smallpox, tetanus, whooping cough, rubella and mumps no significant effect on OR for diabetes was found. The odds ratios for Type 1 diabetes for children exposed to 0, 1–2 or over 2 infections during the last year before diagnosis of diabetes revealed a linear increase (OR = 1.0,1.96 and 2.55 for 0, 1–2 and over 2 infections, respectively). The trend was still significant when standardized for possible confounders such as age and sex of the children, maternal age and education and intake of antibiotics and analgetics. In conclusion, a protective effect of measles vaccination for Type 1 diabetes in childhood is indicated as well as a possible causal relationship between the onset of the disease and the total load of recent infections.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Type 1 Diabetes: Etiology, Immunology, and Therapeutic Strategies

TL;DR: The genetic, environmental, and immunological data underlying the prevention and intervention strategies to constrain T1D are explained, including the efficacy of antigen-specific and antigen-nonspecific immune interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Worldwide increase in incidence of Type I diabetes--the analysis of the data on published incidence trends.

TL;DR: The incidence of Type I diabetes is increasing worldwide both in low and high incidence populations, and by the year 2010 the incidence will be 50 per 100 000 a year in Finland and also in many other populations it will exceed 30 per 100000 a year.
Journal ArticleDOI

β-cell function in new-onset type 1 diabetes and immunomodulation with a heat-shock protein peptide (DiaPep277): a randomised, double-blind, phase II trial

TL;DR: An immunomodulatory peptide from hsp60, p277, arrested � -cell destruction and maintained insulin production in newly diabetic NOD mice and in patients with newly diagnosed (<6 months) type 1 diabetes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Worldwide childhood type 1 diabetes incidence--what can we learn from epidemiology?

TL;DR: Analytical epidemiological studies have identified environmental risk factors operating early in life which might have contributed to the increasing trend in incidence, including enteroviral infections in pregnant women, older maternal age, preeclampsia, cesarean section delivery, increased birthweight, early introduction of cow’s milk proteins and an increased rate of postnatal growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vaccination and autoimmune disease: what is the evidence?

TL;DR: The mechanisms involved in the induction of autoimmunity are reviewed and the implications for vaccination in human beings are assessed.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimability and estimation in case-referent studies

TL;DR: The concepts that case-referent studies provide for the estimation of "relative risk" only if the illness is "rare", and that the rates and risks themselves are inestimable, are overly superficial and restrictve.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation of a virus from the pancreas of a child with diabetic ketoacidosis.

TL;DR: Both the clinical picture and animal studies suggested that the patient's diabetes was virus induced.
Journal Article

Deciding who gets what.

Leslie Brent
- 01 Jan 1983 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Viral antibodies in diabetes mellitus.

TL;DR: In diabetics of recent onset no evidence was found of any excess of antibodies to mumps virus or some common respiratory viruses, but Insulin-dependent diabetes within three months of onset were found to have higher antibody titres to Coxsackie B virus than either normal subjects or patients with diabetes of longer duration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rubella infection and diabetes mellitus

TL;DR: It is concluded that the diabetes seen in congenital rubella is due to viral infection of the pancreatic islet cells.
Related Papers (5)