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. 2022 Oct;10(10):741-760.
doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(22)00218-2. Epub 2022 Sep 13.

Global incidence, prevalence, and mortality of type 1 diabetes in 2021 with projection to 2040: a modelling study

Collaborators, Affiliations

Global incidence, prevalence, and mortality of type 1 diabetes in 2021 with projection to 2040: a modelling study

Gabriel A Gregory et al. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2022 Oct.

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Abstract

Background: Accurate data on type 1 diabetes prevalence, incidence, associated mortality and life expectancy are crucial to inform public health policy, but these data are scarce. We therefore developed a model based on available data to estimate these values for 201 countries for the year 2021 and estimate the projected prevalent cases in 2040.

Methods: We fitted a discrete-time illness-death model (Markov model) to data on type 1 diabetes incidence and type 1 diabetes-associated mortality to produce type 1 diabetes prevalence, incidence, associated mortality and life expectancy in all countries. Type 1 diabetes incidence and mortality data were available from 97 and 37 countries respectively. Diagnosis rates were estimated using data from an expert survey. Mortality was modelled using random-forest regression of published type 1 diabetes mortality data, and life expectancy was calculated accordingly using life tables. Estimates were validated against observed prevalence data for 15 countries. We also estimated missing prevalence (the number of additional people who would be alive with type 1 diabetes if their mortality matched general population rates).

Findings: In 2021, there were about 8·4 (95% uncertainty interval 8·1-8·8) million individuals worldwide with type 1 diabetes: of these 1·5 million (18%) were younger than 20 years, 5·4 million (64%) were aged 20-59 years, and 1·6 million (19%) were aged 60 years or older. In that year there were 0·5 million new cases diagnosed (median age of onset 39 years), about 35 000 non-diagnosed individuals died within 12 months of symptomatic onset. One fifth (1·8 million) of individuals with type 1 diabetes were in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. Remaining life expectancy of a 10-year-old diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 2021 ranged from a mean of 13 years in low-income countries to 65 years in high-income countries. Missing prevalent cases in 2021 were estimated at 3·7 million. In 2040, we predict an increase in prevalent cases to 13·5-17·4 million (60-107% higher than in 2021) with the largest relative increase versus 2021 in low-income and lower-middle-income countries.

Interpretation: The burden of type 1 diabetes in 2021 is vast and is expected to increase rapidly, especially in resource-limited countries. Most incident and prevalent cases are adults. The substantial missing prevalence highlights the premature mortality of type 1 diabetes and an opportunity to save and extend lives of people with type 1 diabetes. Our new model, which will be made publicly available as the Type 1 Diabetes Index model, will be an important tool to support health delivery, advocacy, and funding decisions for type 1 diabetes.

Funding: JDRF International.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests TIGR, SEL, FW, and PR are employees of JDRF, a funder of the study. All other authors declare no competing interests. International Diabetes Federation Diabetes Atlas Type 1 Diabetes in Adults Special Interest Group members: RCWM has received research grants for clinical trials from AstraZeneca, Bayer, MSD, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi, and Tricida; and honoraria for consultancy or lectures from AstraZeneca and Boehringer Ingelheim. All proceeds were donated to the Chinese University of Hong Kong to support diabetes research. AJJ has served on advisory boards for Medtronic Australia, Abbott Diabetes Australia and Sanofi-Aventis and received research grants Abbott Europe, Mylan and Sanofi, JDRF, and the NHMRC and has received speaker honorarium from Amgen. RAO has received consulting fees from Janssen, and funding from Janssen as a Co-Investigator on the CASCADE type 1 diabetes screening study. RAO has received UK Medical Research Council Funding to develop a type 1 diabetes genetic risk score diagnostic test in collaboration with Randox. The 10th edition of the IDF Diabetes Atlas was supported by an educational grant from the Pfizer-MSD Alliance, with additional support from Sanofi and Novo Nordisk. All remaining authors do not have any conflicts of interest. All other members declare no competing interests.

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