1. Gastrointestinal Infections Modulate the Risk for Insulin Autoantibodies as the First-Appearing Autoantibody in the TEDDY Study.
- Author
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Lönnrot M, Lynch KF, Rewers M, Lernmark Å, Vehik K, Akolkar B, Hagopian W, Krischer J, McIndoe RA, Toppari J, Ziegler AG, Petrosino JF, Lloyd R, and Hyöty H
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Infant, Child, Preschool, Autoantibodies, Case-Control Studies, Insulin, Insulin Antibodies, Glutamate Decarboxylase, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Islets of Langerhans
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate gastrointestinal infection episodes (GIEs) in relation to the appearance of islet autoantibodies in The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) cohort., Research Design and Methods: GIEs on risk of autoantibodies against either insulin (IAA) or GAD (GADA) as the first-appearing autoantibody were assessed in a 10-year follow-up of 7,867 children. Stool virome was characterized in a nested case-control study., Results: GIE reports (odds ratio [OR] 2.17 [95% CI 1.39-3.39]) as well as Norwalk viruses found in stool (OR 5.69 [1.36-23.7]) at <1 year of age were associated with an increased IAA risk at 2-4 years of age. GIEs reported at age 1 to <2 years correlated with a lower risk of IAA up to 10 years of age (OR 0.48 [0.35-0.68]). GIE reports at any other age were associated with an increase in IAA risk (OR 2.04 for IAA when GIE was observed 12-23 months prior [1.41-2.96]). Impacts on GADA risk were limited to GIEs <6 months prior to autoantibody development in children <4 years of age (OR 2.16 [1.54-3.02])., Conclusions: Bidirectional associations were observed. GIEs were associated with increased IAA risk when reported before 1 year of age or 12-23 months prior to IAA. Norwalk virus was identified as one possible candidate factor. GIEs reported during the 2nd year of life were associated with a decreased IAA risk., (© 2023 by the American Diabetes Association.)
- Published
- 2023
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