Section 4A - Study Objectives/Background and Significance (Phase 3 - 11/2010)
Section 4A - Page 12
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Study
4.3.2.
Limitations of Existing Systems and Role of SEARCH
There are a number of limitations to public health surveillance that have been identified
by SEARCH that require further development. These include difficulties in ascertaining
youth with T2D and youth 15 years of age and older with either type of diabetes, groups
that had not previously been included in the majority of ongoing
studies of childhood
diabetes. While a substantial majority of youth with T1D (and younger children with
T2D) receive care or consultation from pediatric endocrinologists
(27)
, patterns of care for
youth with T2D are not as well described. In addition, the approach to determining the
date of diabetes diagnosis, race/ethnicity, and the type of diabetes is often difficult using
existing health care data, especially from administrative data sources which are
developed for billing purposes and do not include and/or code this information
consistently. The ‘type’ of diabetes as applied by the care provider
has been explored by
SEARCH and found to agree well (>95%) with a pathophysiological assessment based
on markers of autoimmunity and insulin resistance, for cases that fit the typical picture of
T1D (young onset, no overweight, insulin using) and T2D (adolescent onset, overweight,
minority youth, perhaps with no insulin treatment), indicating that clinical diabetes type
as assessed by the care provider may be used as an initial step for surveillance purposes.
However, it is not known whether the use of provider type is adequate for tracking trends
in incidence by type, since there may be changes in provider beliefs and practices over
time that will not be obvious from collected data. SEARCH will explore additional
collected data on main etiologic dimensions of diabetes type (autoantibodies,
genetic
predisposition to autoimmunity, insulin sensitivity, residual insulin secretion) to
determine the sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of constellations of variables
that may improve on this and be useful for public health surveillance. SEARCH will
explore existing data systems (Indian Health Service, HMO, integrated health care
system with electronic medical records) as other ways to extend and validate public
health surveillance approaches on a pilot basis.
4.4.
MORTALITY IN YOUTH WITH DIABETES
Short term mortality risk in youth with DM is an indicator of quality of health care. It may
also be associated
with socio-demographic factors, including sex, race/ethnicity,
socioeconomic status, and access to health care. Few studies have evaluated mortality risk
among persons diagnosed with DM during childhood and the majority has been limited to
persons with T1D. Population-based studies from countries including the United Kingdom
(94)
, Italy
(95)
, Scandinavia
(96 - 98)
, Estonia and Lithuania
(99)
, and the United States
(100)
all
reported increased mortality for persons with youth-onset DM compared to the general
population. The Chicago Childhood Diabetes Registry investigators reported standardized
mortality ratios of 1.90 for African Americans and 3.37 for Latinos
for youth diagnosed with
DM at < 18 years compared to an age-matched population
(100)
. DKA was the most frequent
cause of death, while deaths from CVD, infection, trauma, and other causes were also
Section 4A - Study Objectives/Background and Significance (Phase 3 - 11/2010)
Section 4A - Page 14
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Study
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