Dovc Klemen, Neuman Vit, Gita Gemulla, Cherubini Valentino, Alonso G Todd, Fritsch Maria, Boettcher Claudia, de Beaufort Carine, Holl Reinhard W, de Bock Martin
Department of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, University Children's Hospital, University Medical Centre Ljubljana, and Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Department of Pediatrics, Second Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and Motol University Hospital, Prague, Czechia.
Diabetes Care. 2025 Apr 1;48(4):648-654. doi: 10.2337/dc24-2483.
This study examined the association between diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) at type 1 diabetes diagnosis and long-term glycemic outcomes, insulin requirements, BMI SD score (SDS), and diabetes technology uptake in youth.
Data were from nine countries (Austria, Czechia, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Slovenia, Switzerland, and U.S. [Colorado]), including youth (0.5-15.9 years) diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 2019-2020 and followed for 2 years thereafter. Participants were divided into three groups: no DKA, nonsevere, and severe DKA at diagnosis. HbA1c, insulin requirements, BMI SDS, and use of technology, including automated insulin delivery (AID), were assessed.
The analysis included 9,269 individuals (54.8% males, mean age 9.0 years). DKA at diagnosis was observed in 34.2% of participants and severe DKA in 12.8%. After 1 year, adjusted mean HbA1c was higher in the severe DKA group (7.41%) compared with nonsevere DKA (7.23%, P = 0.001) and no DKA groups (7.14, P < 0.001), and this difference persisted after 2 years (7.58% vs. 7.38% [P < 0.001] and vs. 7.32% [P < 0.001]). Higher BMI SDS was observed in both DKA groups compared with no DKA. The use of AID was associated with lower HbA1c levels compared with other treatment modalities and moderated differences between DKA groups after 2 years of follow-up (P = 0.072).
Severe and nonsevere DKA at type 1 diabetes diagnosis were both associated with persistently higher HbA1c and higher BMI SDS. AID use diminishes the association of DKA at diagnosis and higher HbA1c over time.
本研究探讨1型糖尿病诊断时的糖尿病酮症酸中毒(DKA)与青少年长期血糖结局、胰岛素需求、体重指数标准差评分(SDS)及糖尿病技术应用之间的关联。
数据来自九个国家(奥地利、捷克、德国、意大利、卢森堡、新西兰、斯洛文尼亚、瑞士和美国[科罗拉多州]),包括2019 - 2020年诊断为1型糖尿病且此后随访2年的青少年(0.5 - 15.9岁)。参与者分为三组:诊断时无DKA、非重度DKA和重度DKA。评估糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)、胰岛素需求、体重指数SDS以及技术应用情况,包括自动胰岛素注射(AID)。
分析纳入9269名个体(54.8%为男性,平均年龄9.0岁)。34.2%的参与者诊断时有DKA,12.8%有重度DKA。1年后,重度DKA组的校正平均HbA1c(7.41%)高于非重度DKA组(7.23%,P = 0.001)和无DKA组(7.14,P < 0.001),且这种差异在2年后仍然存在(7.58% vs. 7.38%[P < 0.001]和vs. 7.32%[P < 0.001])。与无DKA组相比,两个DKA组的体重指数SDS均更高。与其他治疗方式相比,使用AID与较低的HbA1c水平相关,且在随访2年后减轻了DKA组之间的差异(P = 0.072)。
1型糖尿病诊断时的重度和非重度DKA均与持续较高的HbA1c和较高的体重指数SDS相关。随着时间推移,使用AID可减少诊断时DKA与较高HbA1c之间的关联。