The National Institute for Health and Welfare, Nutrition Unit, Helsinki, Finland2Center for Child Health Research, University of Tampere and Tampere University Hospital, Tampere, Finland3The Science Center of Pirkanmaa Hospital District, Tampere, Finland4.
The National Institute for Health and Welfare, Nutrition Unit, Helsinki, Finland4School of Health Sciences, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland.
JAMA Pediatr. 2014 Aug;168(8):755-63. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2014.296.
The role of microbial exposure during early life in the development of type 1 diabetes mellitus is unclear.
To investigate whether animal contact and other microbial exposures during infancy are associated with the development of preclinical and clinical type 1 diabetes.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A birth cohort of children with HLA antigen-DQB1-conferred susceptibility to type 1 diabetes was examined. Participants included 3143 consecutively born children at 2 hospitals in Finland between 1996 and 2004.
The following exposures during the first year of life were assessed: indoor and outdoor dogs and cats, farm animals, farming, visit to a stable, day care, and exposure to antibiotics during the first week of life.
Clinical and preclinical type 1 diabetes were used as outcomes. The latter was defined as repeated positivity for islet-cell antibodies plus for at least 1 of 3 other diabetes-associated autoantibodies analyzed and/or clinical type 1 diabetes. The autoantibodies were analyzed at 3- to 12-month intervals since the birth of the child.
Children exposed to an indoor dog, compared with otherwise similar children without an indoor dog exposure, had a reduced odds of developing preclinical type 1 diabetes (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 0.47; 95% CI, 0.28-0.80; P = .005) and clinical type 1 diabetes (adjusted OR, 0.40; 95% CI, 0.14-1.14; P = .08). All of the other microbial exposures studied were not associated with preclinical or clinical diabetes: the odds ratios ranged from 0.74 to 1.58.
Among the 9 early microbial exposures studied, only the indoor dog exposure during the first year of life was inversely associated with the development of preclinical type 1 diabetes. This finding needs to be confirmed in other populations.
微生物暴露在生命早期对 1 型糖尿病的发展的作用尚不清楚。
研究婴儿期动物接触和其他微生物暴露是否与临床前和临床 1 型糖尿病的发展有关。
设计、地点和参与者:本研究对具有 HLA 抗原-DQB1 易感性的儿童进行了一项出生队列研究。参与者包括芬兰两家医院 1996 年至 2004 年间连续出生的 3143 名儿童。
评估了生命第一年的以下暴露:室内和室外的狗和猫、农场动物、养殖、参观马厩、日托以及生命第一周的抗生素暴露。
临床和临床前 1 型糖尿病作为结局。后者被定义为胰岛细胞抗体阳性,加上至少有 3 种其他糖尿病相关自身抗体阳性,或者临床 1 型糖尿病。自儿童出生以来,每隔 3-12 个月分析这些自身抗体。
与没有室内狗暴露的其他类似儿童相比,暴露于室内狗的儿童发生临床前 1 型糖尿病的几率降低(调整后的优势比 [OR],0.47;95%CI,0.28-0.80;P=0.005)和临床 1 型糖尿病(调整后的 OR,0.40;95%CI,0.14-1.14;P=0.08)。研究中的所有其他微生物暴露均与临床前或临床糖尿病无关:比值比范围在 0.74 至 1.58 之间。
在研究的 9 种早期微生物暴露中,只有生命第一年的室内狗暴露与临床前 1 型糖尿病的发展呈负相关。这一发现需要在其他人群中得到证实。