Volume 48, Number 5, 829-837, DOI: 10.1007/s00125-005-1733-3

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European Association for the Study of Diabetes

Dietary manipulation of beta cell autoimmunity in infants at increased risk of type 1 diabetes: a pilot study

H. K. Åkerblom, S. M. Virtanen, J. Ilonen, E. Savilahti, O. Vaarala, A. Reunanen, K. Teramo, A.-M. Hämäläinen, J. Paronen and M.-A. Riikjärv, et al.

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Abstract

Aims/hypothesis  

We aimed to assess the feasibility of a dietary intervention trial with weaning to hydrolysed formula in infants at increased risk of type 1 diabetes and to study the effect of the intervention on the emergence of diabetes-associated autoantibodies in early childhood.

Methods  

We studied 242 newborn infants who had a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes and carried risk-associated HLA-DQB1 alleles. After exclusive breastfeeding, the infants underwent a double-blind, randomised pilot trial of either casein hydrolysate (Nutramigen; Mead Johnson) or conventional cowrsquos milk-based formula until the age of 6–8 months. During a mean observation period of 4.7 years, autoantibodies to insulin, anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase and insulinoma-associated antigen-2 were measured by radiobinding assays, and islet cell antibodies (ICA) by immunofluorescence.

Results  

The feasibility of screening and identifying a cohort of first-degree relatives with HLA-conferred disease susceptibility, enrolling them in a dietary intervention trial and following them for seroconversion to autoantibody positivity is established. The cumulative incidence of autoantibodies was somewhat smaller in the casein hydrolysate vs control formula group, suggesting the need for a larger well-powered study. After adjustment for duration of study formula feeding, life-table analysis showed a significant protection by the intervention from positivity for ICA (p=0.02) and at least one autoantibody (p=0.03).

Conclusions/interpretation  

The present study provides the first evidence ever in man, despite its limited power, that it may be possible to manipulate spontaneous beta cell autoimmunity by dietary intervention in infancy.

Keywords  Beta cell autoimmunity - Dietary manipulation - Feasibility - Infants - Type 1 diabetes

An erratum to this article can be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00125-005-1881-5
Presented in part at the 59th Annual Meeting of the American Diabetes Association (ADA) in San Diego, June 1999, and at the 61st Annual Meeting of ADA, Presidentrsquos Session on Late-Breaking Abstracts, June 2001, Philadelphia

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