1. Oral contraception in adolescents with type 1 diabetes and its association with cardiovascular risk factors. A multicenter DPV study on 24 011 patients from Germany, Austria or Luxembourg.
- Author
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Bohn, Barbara, Mönkemöller, Kirsten, Hilgard, Dörte, Dost, Axel, Schwab, Karl Otfried, Lilienthal, Eggert, Hammer, Elke, Hake, Kathrin, Fritsch, Maria, Gohlke, Bettina, de Beaufort, Carine, Holl, Reinhard W., and on behalf of the DPV‐initiative
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,BLOOD pressure ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,REPORTING of diseases ,ALCOHOL drinking ,GLYCOSYLATED hemoglobin ,HYPERLIPIDEMIA ,TYPE 1 diabetes ,LIPIDS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,ORAL contraceptives ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,SMOKING ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,BODY mass index ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method ,DISEASE duration ,SEDENTARY lifestyles ,DATA analysis software ,GLYCEMIC control ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Objective: To investigate differences in cardiovascular risk factors and metabolic control in girls with type 1 diabetes with or without use of oral contraceptives (OC) from the multicenter “diabetes prospective follow‐up” (DPV) registry. Methods: Twenty‐four thousand eleven adolescent girls (13 to < 18 years of age) from Germany, Austria or Luxembourg with type 1 diabetes from the DPV registry were included in this cross‐sectional study. Multivariable regression models were applied to compare clinical characteristics (hemoglobin A1c [HbA1
C ], blood pressure, serum lipids, body mass index) and lifestyle factors (smoking, physical inactivity, alcohol consumption) between girls with or without OC use. Confounders: age, diabetes duration and migration background. Statistical analysis: SAS 9.4. Results: In girls with type 1 diabetes and OC use, clinical characteristics and lifestyle factors were less favorable compared to non‐users. Differences were most pronounced for the prevalence of dyslipidemia (OC‐users: 40.0% vs non‐users: 29.4; P < .0001) and the number of smokers (OC‐users: 25.9% vs non‐users: 12.5%; P < .0001). OC use, sociodemographic characteristics and lifestyle factors explained between 1 and 7% of the population variance in serum lipids and blood pressure. The use of OC explained a small additional proportion in all variables considered (<1%). Conclusions: OC use in adolescent girls with type 1 diabetes was associated with a poorer cardiovascular risk profile. Biological risk factors were partly explained by a clustering of sociodemographic and lifestyle factors with a small additional contribution of OC use. Prescription of OC should therefore be combined with a screening for cardiovascular risk factors and targeted education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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