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Maternal vs paternal diabetes: The parental history is different in younger onset versus older onset type 2 diabetes
Authors:Timothy L. Middleton  Belinda A. Brooks  Maria I. Constantino  Ted Wu  Jencia Wong  Dennis K. Yue
Affiliation:1. Diabetes Centre, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;2. School of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;3. Susan Wakil School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract:
BackgroundA number of previous studies exploring family history of type 2 diabetes have reported a predominance of maternal diabetes. These studies have not explicitly compared parental history of diabetes across the spectrum of disease onset from youth to later adulthood.MethodsFamily history data from 11,467 patients with type 2 diabetes were extracted from the RPA Diabetes Centre database. Parental histories of diabetes were compared across a range of age of diagnosis strata (15-<30, 30-<40, 40-<50, 50-<60 and 60-<70 years). For the young-onset group (diagnosed between 15 and 30 years of age), associations between parental history of diabetes and the presence of cardio-metabolic risk factors and diabetic complications were also explored.ResultsFor the total cohort and within each age of diagnosis strata, more individuals reported maternal history than paternal history of diabetes. The young-onset group demonstrated the highest prevalence of any parental history of diabetes (60.7%), the highest combined maternal and paternal history (15.8%) and the smallest differential between maternal (25.1%) and paternal (19.7%) history of diabetes. Within the young-onset group, no significant association between parental history and cardio-metabolic risk factors or diabetic complications were identified after a median of 15.0 years of diabetes exposure.ConclusionOverall, our results demonstrate a consistent maternal excess of diabetes which could be consistent with an underlying epigenetic effect. However, the differential between maternal and paternal history is significantly lower in the young-onset group. Earlier emergence of type 2 diabetes may therefore reflect a different interaction and impact of genetic and environmental factors.
Keywords:Corresponding author at: Diabetes Support Centre, Suite 3, Ground Floor, Missenden Medical Centre, 54-60 Briggs Street, Camperdown, NSW 2050, Australia.  Young-onset type 2 diabetes  Family history  Genetics of diabetes
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