早发型2型糖尿病:下一个主要的糖尿病转变

Andrea Luk, Sarah H Wild, Sophie Jones, Ranjit Mohan Anjana, Marie-France Hivert, John McCaffrey, Edward W Gregg, Shivani Misra
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摘要

早发性2型糖尿病的发病率正在增加,现在越来越多的病例发生在儿童、青少年和年轻人中。这一转变主要是由年轻人群(尤其是高收入国家)肥胖率上升所推动的。然而,肥胖和早发型2型糖尿病之间的关系因种族而异,一些人群在较低的BMI阈值下表现出更高的风险,可能是由于胰岛素抵抗和β细胞功能的差异。社会经济因素进一步塑造了疾病模式,早发性2型糖尿病对高收入环境中低收入人群的影响不成比例,而在低收入和中等收入国家,经济发展和城市化导致较富裕群体的发病率上升。这种向早发性2型糖尿病转变的后果是严重的,与晚发性疾病相比,疾病进展加快,微血管和大血管并发症风险增加,社会和卫生保健负担相当大。鉴于儿童和青少年肥胖症的持续增加,预计早发性2型糖尿病的发病率将进一步增加,给全球卫生保健系统带来越来越大的压力。在本系列三篇论文的第一篇中,我们研究了早发性2型糖尿病的发病率和患病率的全球趋势,确定了这种向年轻化诊断转变的关键驱动因素,并回顾了人群和个人水平上危险因素的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Early-onset type 2 diabetes: the next major diabetes transition
The incidence of early-onset type 2 diabetes is increasing, with a growing number of cases now occurring in children, adolescents, and young adults. This transition is primarily driven by the rising prevalence of obesity in younger populations, especially in high-income countries. However, the relationship between obesity and early-onset type 2 diabetes varies across ethnic groups, with some populations exhibiting a higher risk at lower BMI thresholds, possibly due to differences in insulin resistance and β-cell function. Socioeconomic factors further shape disease patterns, with early-onset type 2 diabetes disproportionately affecting lower-income populations in high-income settings, whereas in low-income and middle-income countries, economic development and urbanisation have contributed to increasing incidence among more affluent groups. The consequences of this transition to early-onset type 2 diabetes are severe, with accelerated disease progression, heightened risks of microvascular and macrovascular complications, and considerable societal and health-care burdens compared with later-onset disease. Given the continuing rise in childhood and adolescent obesity, the incidence of early-onset type 2 diabetes is expected to increase further, placing mounting pressure on health-care systems worldwide. In the first of three papers in this Series, we examine global trends in the incidence and prevalence of early-onset type 2 diabetes, identify key drivers of this transition to diagnosis at younger ages, and review the evidence for risk factors both at population and individual level.
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