News Release

Type 2 diabetes linked to prenatal diabetic environment?

NB. Please note that if you are outside North America, the embargo for LANCET press material is 0001 hours UK Time Friday 30 May 2003.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

The Lancet_DELETED

A preliminary study in this week's issue of THE LANCET suggests that offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes could be at an increased risk of type 2 diabetes in adult life--even in the absence of inherited type 1 or type 2 diabetic disease.

Type 2 diabetes generally occurs in adulthood and is caused by both genetic and environmental factors (such as obesity). Jean-Francois Gautier from Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris, France, and colleagues assessed whether prenatal exposure to a diabetic environment is associated with metabolic disorders in later adult life, which can lead to type 2 diabetes. The investigators assessed glucose tolerance and metabolic abnormalities that are predisposing to type 2 diabetes in offspring of mothers or fathers with type 1 diabetes. The confounding effect of genetic predisposition for type 2 diabetes was avoided by ensuring there was no family history of type 2 diabetes in either parent.

Insulin production in response to oral and intravenous glucose was measured in 15 non-diabetic adult offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes (exposed participants) and 16 offspring of type 1 diabetic fathers (the control group). None of the participants had inherited type 1 diabetes.

A third of the participants prenatally exposed to a diabetic environment from mothers with type 1 diabetes had glucose intolerance compared with none of the control group; insulin secretion was both lower in concentration and slower in release than among participants in the control group.

Jean-Francois Gautier comments: "Exposure to a diabetic environment in utero is associated with increased occurrence of impaired glucose tolerance and a defective insulin secretory response in adult offspring, independent of genetic predisposition to type 2 diabetes. Epidemiological studies are needed to confirm our observations before therapeutic strategies can be devised."

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Contact : Professor Jean-Francois Gautier, Service de Diabetologie, Hôpital Saint-Louis, 1, avenue Claude Vellefaux, 75010 Paris, France;
T) 33-142-494-857;
F) 33-142-494-178;
E) j-fgautier@wanadoo.fr


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