Diabetes among people with intellectual disabilities vs the general population: a register study
(2024) 17th European Public Health Conference p.385-385- Abstract
- People with intellectual disabilities have an increased risk of diabetes mellitus (DM). They tend to develop it at earlier ages than the general population, resulting in even higher risks in younger people. However, few studies have separated Type 1 and Type 2 DM. The aim of this study was to assess prevalence of different types of DM in different age groups in relation to the general population. We categorized all people in Skåne, Sweden, as ID (service and support for people with ID and/or autism, or a diagnosis of ID or Down syndrome; n = 14 716) or general population (gPop; excluding family members of people in ID; n = 1 226 955). Data regarding diagnoses of Type 1 (E10 in ICD-10) and Type 2 (E11) DM were collected for 2014-2021. Age... (More)
- People with intellectual disabilities have an increased risk of diabetes mellitus (DM). They tend to develop it at earlier ages than the general population, resulting in even higher risks in younger people. However, few studies have separated Type 1 and Type 2 DM. The aim of this study was to assess prevalence of different types of DM in different age groups in relation to the general population. We categorized all people in Skåne, Sweden, as ID (service and support for people with ID and/or autism, or a diagnosis of ID or Down syndrome; n = 14 716) or general population (gPop; excluding family members of people in ID; n = 1 226 955). Data regarding diagnoses of Type 1 (E10 in ICD-10) and Type 2 (E11) DM were collected for 2014-2021. Age at inclusion (i.e., 2014) was considered as children (0-12 years), adolescents (13-18), young adults (19-24), adults (25-44), lower middle-age (45-54), upper middle-age (55-64), older people (65+). The overall prevalence of Type 1 DM was 2.3% in ID and 1.6% in gPop (relative risk [RR] 2.14, 95% confidence interval 1.93-2.38). In ID, the prevalence was below 2% in the youngest age groups, and then increased with age until upper middle-age, where it reached 6.0%. The risk of Type 1 DM among people with ID compared to gPop was relatively stable, with the RR ranging between 1.16 (older people) to 2.83 (adults). For Type 2 DM, the overall prevalence was 7.2% in ID and 7.8% in gPop (RR 2.00, 1.89-2.13). There was a consistent age-related increase in prevalence in ID, from 0.3% among children to 27.4% among older people. The opposite pattern was found for the risk compared to gPop, with the higher risks (RR 3.63-6.98) in the younger age groups and lower risks (RR 1.27-4.41) in the older age groups. Both types of DM were more prevalent among people with intellectual disabilities than in the general population. However, the patterns of prevalence and risk compared to the general population differed for the two types. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/b76e661e-8c37-4d12-aae2-b377e175f9c5
- author
- Stroh, Emilie
LU
; Sandberg, Magnus
LU
; Kristensson, Jimmie
LU
and Axmon, Anna
LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2024-11-12
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- pages
- 385 - 385
- conference name
- 17th European Public Health Conference
- conference location
- Lisbon, Portugal
- conference dates
- 2024-11-12 - 2024-11-15
- project
- Health care utilization in primary and specialist care among people with intellectual disability: A longitudinal register study
- Support, health care, end-of-life care, and causes of death among people with intellectual disability: Effects of the Covid-19 pandemic
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b76e661e-8c37-4d12-aae2-b377e175f9c5
- alternative location
- http://10.1093/eurpub/ckae144.990
- date added to LUP
- 2026-03-12 09:56:00
- date last changed
- 2026-03-12 14:23:53
@misc{b76e661e-8c37-4d12-aae2-b377e175f9c5,
abstract = {{People with intellectual disabilities have an increased risk of diabetes mellitus (DM). They tend to develop it at earlier ages than the general population, resulting in even higher risks in younger people. However, few studies have separated Type 1 and Type 2 DM. The aim of this study was to assess prevalence of different types of DM in different age groups in relation to the general population. We categorized all people in Skåne, Sweden, as ID (service and support for people with ID and/or autism, or a diagnosis of ID or Down syndrome; n = 14 716) or general population (gPop; excluding family members of people in ID; n = 1 226 955). Data regarding diagnoses of Type 1 (E10 in ICD-10) and Type 2 (E11) DM were collected for 2014-2021. Age at inclusion (i.e., 2014) was considered as children (0-12 years), adolescents (13-18), young adults (19-24), adults (25-44), lower middle-age (45-54), upper middle-age (55-64), older people (65+). The overall prevalence of Type 1 DM was 2.3% in ID and 1.6% in gPop (relative risk [RR] 2.14, 95% confidence interval 1.93-2.38). In ID, the prevalence was below 2% in the youngest age groups, and then increased with age until upper middle-age, where it reached 6.0%. The risk of Type 1 DM among people with ID compared to gPop was relatively stable, with the RR ranging between 1.16 (older people) to 2.83 (adults). For Type 2 DM, the overall prevalence was 7.2% in ID and 7.8% in gPop (RR 2.00, 1.89-2.13). There was a consistent age-related increase in prevalence in ID, from 0.3% among children to 27.4% among older people. The opposite pattern was found for the risk compared to gPop, with the higher risks (RR 3.63-6.98) in the younger age groups and lower risks (RR 1.27-4.41) in the older age groups. Both types of DM were more prevalent among people with intellectual disabilities than in the general population. However, the patterns of prevalence and risk compared to the general population differed for the two types.}},
author = {{Stroh, Emilie and Sandberg, Magnus and Kristensson, Jimmie and Axmon, Anna}},
language = {{eng}},
month = {{11}},
pages = {{385--385}},
title = {{Diabetes among people with intellectual disabilities vs the general population: a register study}},
url = {{http://10.1093/eurpub/ckae144.990}},
year = {{2024}},
}