TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantification of excess risk for diabetes for those born in times of hunger, in an entire population of a nation, across a century
AU - Thurner, Stefan
AU - Klimek, Peter
AU - Szell, Michael
AU - Duftschmid, Georg
AU - Endel, Gottfried
AU - Kautzky-Willer, Alexandra
AU - Kasper, David C
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Based on a unique dataset comprising all 325,000 Austrian patients that were under pharmaceutical treatment for diabetes during 2006 and 2007, we measured the excess risk of developing diabetes triggered by undernourishment in early life. We studied the percentage of all diabetes patients in the total population specifically for each year of birth, from 1917 to 2007. We found a massive excess risk of diabetes in people born during the times of the three major famines and immediately after, which occurred in Austria in the 20th century: 1918–1919, 1938, and 1946–1947. Depending on the region, there was an up to 40% higher chance of having diabetes when born in 1919–1921, compared with 1918 or 1922, where age-specific typical diabetes ratios are observed. The excess risk for diabetes was practically absent in those provinces of Austria that were less affected by the famines. We show that diabetes rates exhibit nontrivial, age-specific sex differences, and correlate with the economic wealth of the region. Our results might be of relevance for establishing higher awareness in the health system for those born in high-risk years, and underline the importance of ensuring sufficient nutrition in prenatal and early stages of life.
AB - Based on a unique dataset comprising all 325,000 Austrian patients that were under pharmaceutical treatment for diabetes during 2006 and 2007, we measured the excess risk of developing diabetes triggered by undernourishment in early life. We studied the percentage of all diabetes patients in the total population specifically for each year of birth, from 1917 to 2007. We found a massive excess risk of diabetes in people born during the times of the three major famines and immediately after, which occurred in Austria in the 20th century: 1918–1919, 1938, and 1946–1947. Depending on the region, there was an up to 40% higher chance of having diabetes when born in 1919–1921, compared with 1918 or 1922, where age-specific typical diabetes ratios are observed. The excess risk for diabetes was practically absent in those provinces of Austria that were less affected by the famines. We show that diabetes rates exhibit nontrivial, age-specific sex differences, and correlate with the economic wealth of the region. Our results might be of relevance for establishing higher awareness in the health system for those born in high-risk years, and underline the importance of ensuring sufficient nutrition in prenatal and early stages of life.
KW - Diabetes risk
KW - Undernourishment
KW - Early-life nutrition
KW - Famine impact
KW - Austrian population study
KW - 20th-century famines
KW - Birth cohort analysis
KW - Regional health disparities
KW - Age-specific diabetes rates
KW - Prenatal nutrition
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1215626110
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1215626110
M3 - Tidsskriftartikel
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 110
SP - 4703
EP - 4707
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 12
ER -