Division of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction, Imperial College London, London, UK; Department of Diabetes and Endocrinology, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, UK.
Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Department of Medicine, Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2023 Oct;11(10):768-782. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(23)00225-5. Epub 2023 Sep 11.
Type 2 diabetes diagnosed in childhood or early adulthood is termed early-onset type 2 diabetes. Cases of early-onset type 2 diabetes are increasing rapidly globally, alongside rising obesity. Compared with a diagnosis later in life, an earlier-onset diagnosis carries an unexplained excess risk of microvascular complications, adverse cardiovascular outcomes, and earlier death. Women with early-onset type 2 diabetes also have a higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes. The high burden of complications renders individuals with early-onset type 2 diabetes at future risk of multimorbidity and interventions to reverse these concerning trends should be a priority. Within the early-onset cohort, disease pathophysiology and interventions have been better studied in paediatric-onset (<19 years) type 2 diabetes compared to adults; however, young adults aged 19-39 years (a larger number proportionally) are not well characterised and are also invisible in the current evidence base supporting management, which is derived from trials in later-onset type 2 diabetes. Young adults with type 2 diabetes face challenges in self-management that older individuals are less likely to experience (being in education or of working age, higher diabetes distress, and possible obesity-related stigma and diabetes-related stigma). There is a major research gap as to the optimal strategies to deploy in managing type 2 diabetes in adolescents and young adults, given that current models of care appear to not work as well in this age group. In the face of manifold risk factors (obesity, female sex, social deprivation, non-White European ethnicity, and genetic risk factors) prevention strategies with tailored lifestyle interventions, where needed, are likely to have greater success, but more evidence is needed. In this Review, we draw on evidence from both adolescents and young adults to provide a contemporary update on the current insights and emerging trends in early-onset type 2 diabetes.
儿童期或成年早期被诊断为 2 型糖尿病的患者被称为早发性 2 型糖尿病。随着肥胖率的上升,全球早发性 2 型糖尿病的病例数量迅速增加。与晚年发病相比,早发性 2 型糖尿病患者的微血管并发症、不良心血管结局和更早死亡的风险不明原因增加。早发性 2 型糖尿病女性患者也有更高的不良妊娠结局风险。由于并发症负担高,使早发性 2 型糖尿病患者未来有多种合并症的风险,因此逆转这些令人担忧的趋势的干预措施应成为优先事项。在早发组中,与成人相比,儿科发病(<19 岁)2 型糖尿病的疾病病理生理学和干预措施研究得更好;然而,19-39 岁的年轻成年人(比例较大)的特征描述不充分,并且在支持管理的当前证据基础中也不可见,该证据基础源自晚期发病 2 型糖尿病的试验。2 型糖尿病的年轻成年人在自我管理方面面临着老年患者不太可能遇到的挑战(在教育或工作年龄、更高的糖尿病困扰、可能的肥胖相关耻辱感和糖尿病相关耻辱感)。由于目前的护理模式似乎在该年龄组中效果不佳,因此在管理青少年和年轻成年人 2 型糖尿病方面,需要制定最佳策略,但目前仍存在重大研究空白。面对多种风险因素(肥胖、女性、社会贫困、非白种欧洲人种族和遗传风险因素),需要有针对性的生活方式干预的预防策略可能会更成功,但需要更多的证据。在这篇综述中,我们借鉴了青少年和年轻成年人的证据,提供了关于早发性 2 型糖尿病的当前见解和新兴趋势的最新信息。