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Type 1 diabetes
Type 1 diabetes
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Type 1 diabetes
Other namesDiabetes mellitus type 1, insulin-dependent diabetes, juvenile diabetes, T1D, childhood diabetes
A blue circle, the symbol for diabetes
Pronunciation
SpecialtyEndocrinology
SymptomsFrequent urination, increased thirst, weight loss
ComplicationsDiabetic ketoacidosis, severe hypoglycemia, cardiovascular disease, and damage to the eyes, kidneys, and nerves
Usual onsetAt any age; over days to weeks
DurationLifelong
CausesBody does not produce enough insulin
Risk factorsFamily history, celiac disease, autoimmune diseases
Diagnostic methodHigh blood sugar levels, autoantibodies targeting insulin-producing cells
PreventionTeplizumab
TreatmentMonitoring blood sugar, injected insulin, managing diet
Prognosis10-12 years shorter life expectancy[1][2][3]
Frequency9 million cases globally[4]

Diabetes mellitus type 1, commonly known as type 1 diabetes (T1D), and formerly known as juvenile diabetes, is an autoimmune disease that occurs when the body's immune system destroys pancreatic cells (beta cells).[5] In healthy persons, beta cells produce insulin. Insulin is a hormone required by the body to store and convert blood sugar into energy.[6] T1D results in high blood sugar levels in the body prior to treatment.[7] Common symptoms include frequent urination, increased thirst, increased hunger, weight loss, and other complications.[5][8] Additional symptoms may include blurry vision, tiredness, and slow wound healing (owing to impaired blood flow).[6] While some cases take longer, symptoms usually appear within weeks or a few months.[9][7]

The cause of type 1 diabetes is not completely understood,[5] but it is believed to involve a combination of genetic and environmental factors.[10][7] The underlying mechanism involves an autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas.[6] Diabetes is diagnosed by testing the level of sugar or glycated hemoglobin (HbA1C) in the blood.[11][12]

Type 1 diabetes can typically be distinguished from type 2 by testing for the presence of autoantibodies[11] and/or declining levels/absence of C-peptide.

There is no known way to prevent type 1 diabetes.[5] Treatment with insulin is required for survival.[7] Insulin therapy is usually given by injection just under the skin but can also be delivered by an insulin pump.[13] A diabetic diet, exercise, and lifestyle modifications are considered cornerstones of management.[6] If left untreated, diabetes can cause many complications.[5] Complications of relatively rapid onset include diabetic ketoacidosis and nonketotic hyperosmolar coma.[11] Long-term complications include heart disease, stroke, kidney failure, foot ulcers, and damage to the eyes.[5] Furthermore, since insulin lowers blood sugar levels, complications may arise from low blood sugar if more insulin is taken than necessary.[11]

Type 1 diabetes makes up an estimated 5–10% of all diabetes cases.[14] The number of people affected globally is unknown, although it is estimated that about 80,000 children develop the disease each year.[11] Within the United States the number of people affected is estimated to be one to three million.[11][15] Rates of disease vary widely, with approximately one new case per 100,000 per year in East Asia and Latin America and around 30 new cases per 100,000 per year in Scandinavia and Kuwait.[16][17] It typically begins in children and young adults but can begin at any age.[7][18]

Signs and symptoms

[edit]
Overview of the most significant symptoms of diabetes

Type 1 diabetes can develop at any age, with a peak in onsets during childhood and adolescence. Adult onsets on the other hand are often initially misdiagnosed as type 2.[18][19][20][21] The major sign of type 1 diabetes is very high blood sugar, which typically manifests in children as a few days to weeks of polyuria (increased urination), polydipsia (increased thirst), and weight loss after being exposed to a triggering factor including infections, strenuous exercise, dehydration.[22][23][24][25][26] Children may also experience increased appetite, blurred vision, bedwetting, recurrent skin infections, candidiasis of the perineum, irritability, and reduced mental acumen.[25][26] Adults with type 1 diabetes tend to have more varied symptoms, which come on over months, rather than days or weeks.[27][26]

Prolonged lack of insulin can cause diabetic ketoacidosis, characterized by fruity breath odor, mental confusion, persistent fatigue, dry or flushed skin, abdominal pain, nausea or vomiting, and labored breathing.[27][28] Blood and urine tests reveal unusually high glucose and ketones in the blood and urine.[29] Untreated ketoacidosis can rapidly progress to loss of consciousness, coma, and death.[29] The percentage of children whose type 1 diabetes begins with an episode of diabetic ketoacidosis varies widely by geography, as low as 15% in parts of Europe and North America, and as high as 80% in the developing world.[29]

Causes

[edit]

Type 1 diabetes is caused by the destruction of β-cells—the only cells in the body that produce insulin—and the consequent progressive insulin deficiency. Without insulin, the body cannot respond effectively to increases in blood sugar. Due to this, people with diabetes have persistent hyperglycemia.[30] In 70–90% of cases, β-cells are destroyed by one's own immune system, for reasons that are not entirely clear.[30] The best-studied components of this autoimmune response are β-cell-targeted antibodies that begin to develop in the months or years before symptoms arise.[30] Typically, someone will first develop antibodies against insulin or the protein GAD65, followed eventually by antibodies against the proteins IA-2, IA-2β, and/or ZNT8. People with a higher level of these antibodies, especially those who develop them earlier in life, are at higher risk for developing symptomatic type 1 diabetes.[31] The trigger for the development of these antibodies remains unclear.[32] Several explanatory theories have been put forward, and the cause may involve genetic susceptibility, a diabetogenic trigger, and/or exposure to an antigen.[33] The remaining 10–30% of type 1 diabetics have β-cell destruction but no sign of autoimmunity; this is called idiopathic type 1 diabetes (its cause is unknown).[30]

Environmental

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Various environmental risks have been studied in an attempt to understand what triggers β-cell destroying autoimmunity. Many aspects of environment and life history are associated with slight increases in type 1 diabetes risk; however, the connection between each risk and diabetes often remains unclear. Type 1 diabetes risk is slightly higher for children whose mothers are obese or older than 35, or for children born by caesarean section.[34] Similarly, a child's weight gain in the first year of life, total weight, and BMI are associated with slightly increased type 1 diabetes risk.[34] Some dietary habits have also been associated with type 1 diabetes risk, namely consumption of cow's milk and dietary sugar intake.[34] Animal studies and some large human studies have found small associations between type 1 diabetes risk and intake of gluten or dietary fiber; however, other large human studies have found no such association.[34] Many potential environmental triggers have been investigated in large human studies and found to be unassociated with type 1 diabetes risk including duration of breastfeeding, time of introduction of cow milk into the diet, vitamin D consumption, blood levels of active vitamin D, and maternal intake of omega-3 fatty acids.[34][35]

A longstanding hypothesis for an environmental trigger is that some viral infection early in life contributes to type 1 diabetes development. Much of this work has focused on enteroviruses, with some studies finding slight associations with type 1 diabetes, and others finding none.[36] Large human studies have searched for, but not yet found an association between type 1 diabetes and various other viral infections, including infections of the mother during pregnancy.[36] Conversely, some have postulated that reduced exposure to pathogens in the developed world increases the risk of autoimmune diseases, often called the hygiene hypothesis. Various studies of hygiene-related factors—including household crowding, daycare attendance, population density, childhood vaccinations, antihelminthic medication, and antibiotic use during early life or pregnancy—show no association with type 1 diabetes.[37]

Genetics

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Type 1 diabetes is partially caused by genetics, and family members of type 1 diabetics have a higher risk of developing the disease themselves. In the general population, the risk of developing type 1 diabetes is around 1 in 250. For someone whose parent has type 1 diabetes, the risk rises to 1–9%. If a sibling has type 1 diabetes, the risk is 6–7%. If someone's identical twin has type 1 diabetes, they have a 30–70% risk of developing it themselves.[38]

About half of the disease's heritability is due to variations in three HLA class II genes involved in antigen presentation: HLA-DRB1, HLA-DQA1, and HLA-DQB1.[38] The variation patterns associated with increased risk of type 1 diabetes are called HLA-DR3 and HLA-DR4-HLA-DQ8, and are common in people of European descent. A pattern associated with reduced risk of type 1 diabetes is called HLA-DR15-HLA-DQ6.[38] Large genome-wide association studies have identified dozens of other genes associated with type 1 diabetes risk, mostly genes involved in the immune system.[38]

Chemicals and drugs

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Some medicines can reduce insulin production or damage β cells, resulting in a disease that resembles type 1 diabetes. The antiviral drug didanosine triggers pancreas inflammation in 5 to 10% of those who take it, sometimes causing lasting β-cell damage.[39] Similarly, up to 5% of those who take the anti-protozoal drug pentamidine experience β-cell destruction and diabetes.[39] Several other drugs cause diabetes by reversibly reducing insulin secretion, namely statins (which may also damage β cells), the post-transplant immunosuppressants cyclosporin A and tacrolimus, the leukemia drug L-asparaginase, and the antibiotic gatifloxicin.[39][40]

Post-operative changes

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One cause of Type 1 diabetes is through surgery. This is due to the destruction or intentional removal of a portion of or the entire pancreas. This decreases the number of beta-islet cells capable of producing insulin greatly, resulting in an acquired form of Type 1 diabetes known as pancreatogenic diabetes mellitus.[41] This type of diabetes is most often seen in patients that undergo a pancreatoduodenectomy (a.k.a. Whipple procedure) or a total pancreatectomy.[42]

Patients who undergo a total pancreatectomy are medically recognized as a "brittle diabetic". This nomenclature informs medical professionals that the patient has no insulin production and requires extensive monitoring to avoid severe hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia.[43] Hypoglycemia is significantly more worrying in these patients due to the potential for coma and even death, as hyperglycemia causes more subtle damage over a longer period of time and only affects consciousness at severe levels. Many of these patients require an insulin pump that constantly injects insulin to reduce their sugar levels .[44]

Diagnosis

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Diabetes is typically diagnosed by a blood test showing unusually high blood sugar. The World Health Organization defines diabetes as blood sugar levels at or above 7.0 mmol/L (126 mg/dL) after fasting for at least eight hours, or a glucose level at or above 11.1 mmol/L (200 mg/dL) two hours after an oral glucose tolerance test.[45] The American Diabetes Association additionally recommends a diagnosis of diabetes for anyone with symptoms of hyperglycemia and blood sugar at any time at or above 11.1 mmol/L, or glycated hemoglobin (hemoglobin A1C) levels at or above 48 mmol/mol (6.5%).[46]

Once a diagnosis of diabetes is established, type 1 diabetes is distinguished from other types by a blood test for the presence of autoantibodies that target various components of the beta cell.[47] The most commonly available tests detect antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase, the beta cell cytoplasm, or insulin, each of which is targeted by antibodies in around 80% of type 1 diabetics.[47] Some healthcare providers also have access to tests for antibodies targeting the beta cell proteins IA-2 and ZnT8; these antibodies are present in around 58% and 80% of people with type 1 diabetes, respectively.[47] Some also test for C-peptide, a byproduct of insulin synthesis. Very low C-peptide levels are suggestive of type 1 diabetes.[47]

The median age of type 1 diabetes diagnosis in the United States is 24 years of age.[48]

Management

[edit]

The mainstay of type 1 diabetes treatment is the regular injection of insulin to manage hyperglycemia.[49] Injections of insulin via subcutaneous injection using either a syringe or an insulin pump are necessary multiple times per day, adjusting dosages to account for food intake, blood glucose levels, and physical activity.[49] The goal of treatment is to maintain blood sugar in a normal range—80–130 mg/dL (4.4–7.2 mmol/L) before a meal; <180 mg/dL (10.0 mmol/L) after—as often as possible.[50] To achieve this, people with diabetes often monitor their blood glucose levels at home. Around 83% of type 1 diabetics monitor their blood glucose by capillary blood testing: pricking the finger to draw a drop of blood, and determining blood glucose with a glucose meter.[51] The American Diabetes Association recommends testing blood glucose around 6–10 times per day: before each meal, before exercise, at bedtime, occasionally after a meal, and any time someone feels the symptoms of hypoglycemia.[51] Around 17% of people with type 1 diabetes use a continuous glucose monitor, a device with a sensor under the skin that constantly measures glucose levels and communicates those levels to an external device.[51] Continuous glucose monitoring is associated with better blood sugar control than capillary blood testing alone; however, continuous glucose monitoring tends to be substantially more expensive.[51] Healthcare providers can also monitor someone's hemoglobin A1C levels, which reflect the average blood sugar over the last three months.[52] The American Diabetes Association recommends a goal of keeping hemoglobin A1C levels under 7% for most adults and 7.5% for children.[52][53]

The goal of insulin therapy is to mimic normal pancreatic insulin secretion: low levels of insulin are constantly present to support basic metabolism, plus the two-phase secretion of additional insulin in response to high blood sugar, then an extended phase of continued insulin secretion.[54] This is accomplished by combining different insulin preparations that act with differing speeds and durations. The standard of care for type 1 diabetes is a bolus of rapid-acting insulin 10–15 minutes before each meal or snack, and as-needed to correct hyperglycemia.[54] In addition, constant low levels of insulin are achieved with one or two daily doses of long-acting insulin, or by steady infusion by an insulin pump.[54] The exact dose of insulin appropriate for each injection depends on the content of the meal/snack, and the person's sensitivity to insulin, and is therefore typically calculated by the individual with diabetes or a family member by hand or assistive device (calculator, chart, mobile app, etc.).[54] People who cannot manage these intensive insulin regimens are sometimes prescribed alternate plans relying on mixtures of rapid- or short-acting and intermediate-acting insulin, which are administered at fixed times along with meals of pre-planned times and carbohydrate composition.[54] The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence now recommends closed-loop insulin systems as an option for all women with type 1 diabetes who are pregnant or planning pregnancy.[55][56][57]

A non-insulin medication approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for treating type 1 diabetes is the amylin analog pramlintide, which replaces the beta-cell hormone amylin. The addition of pramlintide to mealtime insulin injections reduces the boost in blood sugar after a meal, improving blood sugar control.[58] Occasionally, metformin, GLP-1 receptor agonists, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors, or SGLT2 inhibitor are prescribed off-label to people with type 1 diabetes. Fewer than 5% of people with type 1 diabetes use these drugs.[49]

Lifestyle

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Besides insulin, the major way type 1 diabetics control their blood sugar is by learning how various foods impact their blood sugar levels. This is primarily done by tracking their intake of carbohydrates, the type of food with the greatest impact on blood sugar.[59] In general, people with type 1 diabetes are advised to follow an individualized eating plan rather than a pre-decided one.[60] There are camps for children to teach them how and when to use or monitor their insulin without parental help.[61] As psychological stress may have a negative effect on diabetes, a number of measures have been recommended including: exercising, taking up a new hobby, or joining a charity, among others.[62]

Regular exercise is crucial for maintaining overall health, though the effect of exercise on blood sugar can be challenging to predict.[63] Exogenous insulin can drive down blood sugar, leaving those with diabetes at risk of hypoglycemia during and immediately after exercise, then again seven to eleven hours after exercise (called the "lag effect").[63] Conversely, high-intensity exercise can result in a shortage of insulin, and consequent hyperglycemia.[63] The risk of hypoglycemia can be managed by beginning exercise when blood sugar is relatively high (above 100 mg/dL or 5.5 mmol/L), ingesting carbohydrates during or shortly after exercise, and reducing the amount of injected insulin within two hours of the planned exercise.[63] Similarly, the risk of exercise-induced hyperglycemia can be managed by avoiding exercise when insulin levels are very low, when blood sugar is extremely high (above 350 mg/dL or 19.4 mmol/L), or when one feels unwell.[63]

While there is a lot of research on diabetes in youth, it is important to keep progressing, expanding and building our knowledge of Type 1 Diabetes and Type 2 Diabetes. T1DM is an autoimmune disease that prevents the pancreas from producing insulin, which helps the body regulate blood sugar levels.  T2DM is a chronic disease that occurs when your body produces insulin but doesn't use it properly or doesn't produce enough, resulting in high blood-sugar levels or hyperglycemia.  There is no definitive answer on what type of exercise is best for either of these metabolic diseases. The physical activity guidelines state that children should get at least 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous intensity activity each day, which is the same for children without T1DM or T2DM. Addressing challenges is vital for enhancing care and health outcomes for pediatric diabetes patients. Before engaging in physical activity, it is essential to understand your diagnosis and manage it properly.

When focusing on the type of exercise, the first two studies explicitly focus on the role of exercise in managing diabetes, with the first study exploring the benefits of HIIT for psychological and physical health in T1DM and the second focusing on the effectiveness of exercise in T2DM.[64][65] The third study, however, discusses the implications of diabetes misdiagnosis, which indirectly relates to exercise by stressing the importance of managing diabetes properly before engaging in physical activity.[66]  For the impacts that exercise has, the first and second studies highlight exercise as a beneficial tool for managing diabetes, but they present different outcomes.[64][65] In T2DM, exercise is shown to be a powerful tool for improving glycemic control and reducing cardiovascular risk. In T1DM, while exercise can improve lipid profiles and other aspects of health, it doesn't necessarily lead to better blood sugar control, and there are additional barriers, such as fear of hypoglycemia.[65] The first study, however, finds that HIIT can still be effective in improving psychological well-being and exercise adherence for T1DM, showing that exercise has a broader benefit beyond just metabolic control.[64]  All three studies provide insight into the barriers to exercise in diabetes. The first study mentions fear of hypoglycemia and low motivation as challenges for T1DM, while the second reinforces the issue of blood sugar fluctuations and the unpredictability of exercise for those with T1DM.[64][65] The third study is more focused on the broader implications of misdiagnosis, but it implies that exercise could be counterproductive or harmful if a child's diabetes is misdiagnosed.[66] When looking at other factors such as psychological and motivational, the first study places a strong emphasis on psychological factors like exercise enjoyment and intrinsic motivation, suggesting that overcoming psychological barriers is key to exercise adherence in T1DM.[64] In contrast, the second study is more focused on the physical and metabolic effects of exercise, with less emphasis on motivation or enjoyment, although it does briefly mention that many individuals with T1DM are still motivated to exercise by the health benefits or inspiration from others.[65]  Clinical implications show the first two studies focus on the effectiveness of exercise for specific diabetes types, while the third study highlights the importance of correct diagnosis for appropriate care.[64][66][65] This suggests that exercise programs must be tailored not only to the type of diabetes but also to the individual's health status and management plan. The third study emphasizes that without proper diagnosis and management, exercise recommendations could be inappropriate or unsafe.[66] In summary, while the first two studies explore the benefits and challenges of exercise in different diabetes types, the third study stresses the importance of accurate diagnosis and management before engaging in physical activity. Together, these studies highlight the complex interactions between exercise, diabetes type, treatment, and individual challenges.

Transplant

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In some cases, people can receive transplants of the pancreas or isolated islet cells to restore insulin production and alleviate diabetic symptoms. Transplantation of the whole pancreas is rare, due in part to the few available donor organs, and to the need for lifelong immunosuppressive therapy to prevent transplant rejection.[67][68] The American Diabetes Association recommends pancreas transplantation only in people who also require a kidney transplant, or who struggle to perform regular insulin therapy and experience repeated severe side effects of poor blood sugar control.[68] Most pancreas transplants are done simultaneously with a kidney transplant, with both organs from the same donor.[69] The transplanted pancreas continues to function for at least five years in around three-quarters of recipients, allowing them to stop taking insulin.[70]

Transplantations of islets alone have become increasingly common.[71] Pancreatic islets are isolated from a donor pancreas, then injected into the recipient's portal vein from which they implant onto the recipient's liver.[72] In nearly half of recipients, the islet transplant continues to work well enough that they still do not need exogenous insulin five years after transplantation.[73] If a transplant fails, recipients can receive subsequent injections of islets from additional donors into the portal vein.[72] Like with whole pancreas transplantation, islet transplantation requires lifelong immunosuppression and depends on the limited supply of donor organs; it is therefore similarly limited to people with severe poorly controlled diabetes and those who have had or are scheduled for a kidney transplant.[71][74]

Donislecel (Lantidra) allogeneic (donor) pancreatic islet cellular therapy was approved for medical use in the United States in June 2023.[75]

Pathogenesis

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Type 1 diabetes is a result of the destruction of pancreatic beta cells, although what triggers that destruction remains unclear.[76] People with type 1 diabetes tend to have more CD8+ T-cells and B-cells that specifically target islet antigens than those without type 1 diabetes, suggesting a role for the adaptive immune system in beta cell destruction.[76][77] Type 1 diabetics also tend to have reduced regulatory T cell function, which may exacerbate autoimmunity.[76] Destruction of beta cells results in inflammation of the islet of Langerhans, called insulitis. These inflamed islets tend to contain CD8+ T-cells and – to a lesser extent – CD4+ T cells.[76] Abnormalities in the pancreas or the beta cells themselves may also contribute to beta-cell destruction. The pancreases of people with type 1 diabetes tend to be smaller, lighter, and have abnormal blood vessels, nerve innervations, and extracellular matrix organization.[78] In addition, beta cells from people with type 1 diabetes sometimes overexpress HLA class I molecules (responsible for signaling to the immune system) and have increased endoplasmic reticulum stress and issues with synthesizing and folding new proteins, any of which could contribute to their demise.[78]

The mechanism by which the beta cells actually die likely involves both necroptosis and apoptosis, induced or exacerbated by CD8+ T-cells and macrophages.[79] Necroptosis can be triggered by activated T cells – which secrete toxic granzymes and perforin – or indirectly as a result of reduced blood flow or the generation of reactive oxygen species.[79] As some beta cells die, they may release cellular components that amplify the immune response, exacerbating inflammation and cell death.[79] Pancreases from people with type 1 diabetes also have signs of beta cell apoptosis, linked to activation of the janus kinase and TYK2 pathways.[79]

Partial ablation of beta-cell function is enough to cause diabetes; at diagnosis, people with type 1 diabetes often still have detectable beta-cell function. Once insulin therapy is started, many people experience a resurgence in beta-cell function, and can go some time with little-to-no insulin treatment – called the "honeymoon phase".[78] This eventually fades as beta-cells continue to be destroyed, and insulin treatment is required again.[78] Beta-cell destruction is not always complete, as 30–80% of type 1 diabetics produce small amounts of insulin years or decades after diagnosis.[78]

Alpha cell dysfunction

[edit]

Onset of autoimmune diabetes is accompanied by impaired ability to regulate the hormone glucagon,[80] which acts in antagonism with insulin to regulate blood sugar and metabolism. Progressive beta cell destruction leads to dysfunction in the neighboring alpha cells, which secrete glucagon, exacerbating excursions away from euglycemia in both directions; overproduction of glucagon after meals causes sharper hyperglycemia, and failure to stimulate glucagon upon hypoglycemia prevents a glucagon-mediated rescue of glucose levels.[81]

Hyperglucagonemia

[edit]

The onset of type 1 diabetes is followed by an increase in glucagon secretion after meals. Increases have been measured up to 37% during the first year of diagnosis, while C-peptide levels (indicative of islet-derived insulin), decline by up to 45%.[82] Insulin production will continue to fall as the immune system destroys beta cells, and islet-derived insulin will continue to be replaced by therapeutic exogenous insulin. Simultaneously, there is measurable alpha cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia in the early stage of the disease, leading to expanded alpha cell mass. This, together with failing beta cell insulin secretion, begins to account for rising glucagon levels that contribute to hyperglycemia.[81] Some researchers believe glucagon dysregulation to be the primary cause of early-stage hyperglycemia.[83] Leading hypotheses for the cause of postprandial hyperglucagonemia suggest that exogenous insulin therapy is inadequate to replace the lost intraislet signalling to alpha cells previously mediated by beta cell-derived pulsatile insulin secretion.[84][85] Under this working hypothesis intensive insulin therapy has attempted to mimic natural insulin secretion profiles in exogenous insulin infusion therapies.[86] In young people with type 1 diabetes, unexplained deaths could be due to nighttime hypoglycemia triggering abnormal heart rhythms or cardiac autonomic neuropathy, damage to nerves that control the function of the heart.

Hypoglycemic glucagon impairment

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Glucagon secretion is normally increased upon falling glucose levels, but normal glucagon response to hypoglycemia is blunted in type 1 diabetics.[87][88] Beta cell glucose sensing and subsequent suppression of administered insulin secretion is absent, leading to islet hyperinsulinemia which inhibits glucagon release.[87][89]

Autonomic inputs to alpha cells are far more important for glucagon stimulation in the moderate to severe ranges of hypoglycemia, yet the autonomic response is blunted in several ways. Recurrent hypoglycemia leads to metabolic adjustments in the glucose-sensing areas of the brain, shifting the threshold for counterregulatory activation of the sympathetic nervous system to lower glucose concentration.[89] This is known as hypoglycemic unawareness. Subsequent hypoglycemia is met with impairment in the sending of counter-regulatory signals to the islets and adrenal cortex. This accounts for the lack of glucagon stimulation and epinephrine release that would normally stimulate and enhance glucose release and production from the liver, rescuing the diabetic from severe hypoglycemia, coma, and death. Numerous hypotheses have been produced in the search for a cellular mechanism of hypoglycemic unawareness. A consensus has yet to be reached.[90] The major hypotheses are summarized in the following table:[91][89][90]

Mechanisms of hypoglycemic unawareness
Glycogen supercompensation Increased glycogen stores in astrocytes might contribute supplementary glycosyl units for metabolism, counteracting the central nervous system perception of hypoglycemia.
Enhanced glucose metabolism Altered glucose transport and enhanced metabolic efficiency upon recurring hypoglycemia relieve oxidative stress that would activate the sympathetic response.
Alternative fuel hypothesis Decreased reliance on glucose, supplementation of lactate from astrocytes, or ketones meet metabolic demands and reduce stress to the brain.
Brain neuronal communication Hypothalamic inhibitory GABA normally decreases during hypoglycemia, disinhibiting signals for sympathetic tone. Recurrent episodes of hypoglycemia result in increased basal GABA, which fails to decrease normally during subsequent hypoglycemia. Inhibitory tone remains, and sympathetic tone is not increased.

In addition, autoimmune diabetes is characterized by a loss of islet-specific sympathetic innervation.[92] This loss constitutes an 80–90% reduction of islet sympathetic nerve endings, happens early in the progression of the disease, and is persistent through the life of the patient.[93] It is linked to the autoimmune aspect of type 1 diabetics and fails to occur in type 2 diabetics. Early in the autoimmune event, the axon pruning is activated in the islet sympathetic nerves. Increased BDNF and ROS that result from insulitis and beta cell death stimulate the p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR), which acts to prune off axons. Axons are normally protected from pruning by activation of tropomyosin receptor kinase A (Trk A) receptors by NGF, which in islets is primarily produced by beta cells. Progressive autoimmune beta cell destruction, therefore, causes both the activation of pruning factors and the loss of protective factors to the islet sympathetic nerves. This unique form of neuropathy is a hallmark of type 1 diabetes, and plays a part in the loss of glucagon rescue of severe hypoglycemia.[92]

Complications

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The most pressing complications of type 1 diabetes are the always-present risks of poor blood sugar control: severe hypoglycemia and diabetic ketoacidosis. Hypoglycemia – typically blood sugar below 70 mg/dL (3.9 mmol/L) – triggers the release of epinephrine, and can cause people to feel shaky, anxious, or irritable.[94] People with hypoglycemia may also experience hunger, nausea, sweats, chills, headaches, dizziness, and a fast heartbeat.[94] Some feel lightheaded, sleepy, or weak.[94] Severe hypoglycemia can develop rapidly, causing confusion, coordination problems, loss of consciousness, and seizure.[94][95] On average, people with type 1 diabetes experience a hypoglycemia event that requires assistance of another 16–20 times in 100 person-years, and an event leading to unconsciousness or seizure 2–8 times per 100 person-years.[95] The American Diabetes Association recommends treating hypoglycemia by the "15–15 rule": eat 15 grams of carbohydrates, then wait 15 minutes before checking blood sugar; repeat until blood sugar is at least 70 mg/dL (3.9 mmol/L).[94] Severe hypoglycemia that impairs someone's ability to eat is typically treated with injectable glucagon, which triggers glucose release from the liver into the bloodstream.[94] People with repeated bouts of hypoglycemia can develop hypoglycemia unawareness, where the blood sugar threshold at which they experience symptoms of hypoglycemia decreases, increasing their risk of severe hypoglycemic events.[96] Rates of severe hypoglycemia have generally declined due to the advent of rapid-acting and long-acting insulin products in the 1990s and early 2000s;[54] however, acute hypoglycemia still causes 4–10% of type 1 diabetes-related deaths.[95]

The other persistent risk is diabetic ketoacidosis – a state where lack of insulin results in cells burning fat rather than sugar, producing toxic ketones as a byproduct.[28] Ketoacidosis symptoms can develop rapidly, with frequent urination, excessive thirst, nausea, vomiting, and severe abdominal pain all common.[97] More severe ketoacidosis can result in labored breathing, and loss of consciousness due to cerebral edema.[97] People with type 1 diabetes experience diabetic ketoacidosis 1–5 times per 100 person-years, the majority of which result in hospitalization.[98] 13–19% of type 1 diabetes-related deaths are caused by ketoacidosis,[95] making ketoacidosis the leading cause of death in people with type 1 diabetes less than 58 years old.[98]

Long-term complications

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In addition to the acute complications of diabetes, long-term hyperglycemia results in damage to the small blood vessels throughout the body. This damage tends to manifest particularly in the eyes, nerves, and kidneys, causing diabetic retinopathy, diabetic neuropathy, and diabetic nephropathy, respectively.[96] In the eyes, prolonged high blood sugar causes the blood vessels in the retina to become fragile.[99]

People with type 1 diabetes also have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, which is estimated to shorten the life of the average type 1 diabetic by 8–13 years.[100] Cardiovascular disease[101] as well as neuropathy[102] may have an autoimmune basis, as well. Women with type 1 DM have a 40% higher risk of death as compared to men with type 1 DM.[103]

About 12 percent of people with type 1 diabetes have clinical depression.[104] About 6 percent of people with type 1 diabetes also have celiac disease, but in most cases there are no digestive symptoms[105][106] or are mistakenly attributed to poor control of diabetes, gastroparesis, or diabetic neuropathy.[106] In most cases, celiac disease is diagnosed after the onset of type 1 diabetes. The association of celiac disease with type 1 diabetes increases the risk of complications, such as retinopathy and mortality. This association can be explained by shared genetic factors, and inflammation or nutritional deficiencies caused by untreated celiac disease, even if type 1 diabetes is diagnosed first.[105]

Urinary tract infection

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People with diabetes show an increased rate of urinary tract infection.[107] The reason is that bladder dysfunction is more common in people with diabetes than in people without diabetes due to diabetes nephropathy. When present, nephropathy can cause a decrease in bladder sensation, which in turn can cause increased residual urine, a risk factor for urinary tract infections.[108]

Sexual dysfunction

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Sexual dysfunction in people with diabetes is often a result of physical factors such as nerve damage and poor circulation, and psychological factors such as stress and/or depression caused by the demands of the disease.[109] The most common sexual issues in males with diabetes are problems with erections and ejaculation: "With diabetes, blood vessels supplying the penis's erectile tissue can get hard and narrow, preventing the adequate blood supply needed for a firm erection. The nerve damage caused by poor blood glucose control can also cause ejaculate to go into the bladder instead of through the penis during ejaculation, called retrograde ejaculation. When this happens, semen leaves the body in the urine." Another cause of erectile dysfunction is reactive oxygen species created as a result of the disease. Antioxidants can be used to help combat this.[110] Sexual problems are common in women who have diabetes,[109] including reduced sensation in the genitals, dryness, difficulty/inability to orgasm, pain during sex, and decreased libido. Diabetes sometimes decreases estrogen levels in females, which can affect vaginal lubrication. Less is known about the correlation between diabetes and sexual dysfunction in females than in males.[109]

Oral contraceptive pills can cause blood sugar imbalances in women who have diabetes. Dosage changes can help address that, at the risk of side effects and complications.[109]

Women with type 1 diabetes show a higher than normal rate of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS).[111] The reason may be that the ovaries are exposed to high insulin concentrations since women with type 1 diabetes can have frequent hyperglycemia.[112]

Autoimmune disorders

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People with type 1 diabetes are at an increased risk for developing several autoimmune disorders, particularly thyroid problems – around 20% of people with type 1 diabetes have hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism, typically caused by Hashimoto thyroiditis or Graves' disease respectively.[113][95] Celiac disease affects 2–8% of people with type 1 diabetes, and is more common in those who were younger at diabetes diagnosis, and in white people.[113] Type 1 diabetics are also at increased risk of rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, autoimmune gastritis, pernicious anemia, vitiligo, and Addison's disease.[95] Conversely, complex autoimmune syndromes caused by mutations in the immunity-related genes AIRE (causing autoimmune polyglandular syndrome), FoxP3 (causing IPEX syndrome), or STAT3 include type 1 diabetes in their effects.[114]

Prevention

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There is no way to prevent type 1 diabetes;[115] however, the development of diabetes symptoms can be delayed in some people who are at high risk of developing the disease. In 2022, the FDA approved an intravenous injection of teplizumab to delay the progression of type 1 diabetes in those older than eight who have already developed diabetes-related autoantibodies and problems with blood sugar control. In that population, the anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody teplizumab can delay the development of type 1 diabetes symptoms by around two years.[116]

In addition to anti-CD3 antibodies, several other immunosuppressive agents have been trialled to prevent beta cell destruction. Large trials of cyclosporine treatment suggested that cyclosporine could improve insulin secretion in those recently diagnosed with type 1 diabetes; however, people who stopped taking cyclosporine rapidly stopped making insulin, and cyclosporine's kidney toxicity and increased risk of cancer prevented people from using it long-term.[117] Several other immunosuppressive agents – prednisone, azathioprine, anti-thymocyte globulin, mycophenolate, and antibodies against CD20 and IL2 receptor α – have been the subject of research. None has provided lasting protection from the development of type 1 diabetes.[117] There have also been clinical trials attempting to induce immune tolerance by vaccination with insulin, GAD65, and various short peptides targeted by immune cells during type 1 diabetes; none have yet delayed or prevented development of disease.[118]

Several trials have attempted dietary interventions with the hope of reducing the autoimmunity that leads to type 1 diabetes. Trials that withheld cow's milk or gave infants formula free of bovine insulin decreased the development of β-cell-targeted antibodies, but did not prevent the development of type 1 diabetes.[119] Similarly, trials that gave high-risk individuals injected insulin, oral insulin, or nicotinamide did not prevent diabetes development.[119]

Other strategies under investigation for the prevention of type 1 diabetes include gene therapy, stem cell therapy, and modulation of the gut microbiome. Gene therapy approaches are still in early stages. They aim to alter genetic factors that contribute to beta-cell destruction by editing immune responses.[120] Stem cell therapies are also being researched, with the hope that they can either regenerate insulin-producing beta cells or protect them from immune attack.[121] Trials using stem cells to restore beta cell function or regulate immune responses are ongoing.

Modifying the gut microbiota through the use of probiotics, prebiotics, or specific diets has also gained attention. Some evidence suggests that the gut microbiome plays a role in immune regulation, and researchers are investigating whether altering the microbiome could reduce the risk of autoimmunity and, subsequently, type 1 diabetes.[122]

Tolerogenic therapies, which seek to induce immune tolerance to beta-cell antigens, are another area of interest. Techniques such as using dendritic cells or regulatory T cells engineered to promote tolerance to beta cells are being studied in clinical trials, though these approaches remain experimental.[123]

There is also a hypothesis that certain viral infections, particularly enteroviruses, may trigger type 1 diabetes in genetically predisposed individuals. Researchers are investigating whether vaccines targeting these viruses could reduce the risk of developing the disease.[124]

Combination immunotherapies are being explored to achieve more durable immune protection by using multiple agents together. For example, anti-CD3 antibodies may be combined with other immunomodulatory agents such as IL-1 blockers or checkpoint inhibitors.[125]

Finally, researchers are studying how environmental factors such as infections, diet, and stress may affect immune regulation through epigenetic modifications. The hope is that targeting these epigenetic changes could delay or prevent the onset of type 1 diabetes in high-risk individuals.[126]

Epidemiology

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Type 1 diabetes makes up an estimated 10–15% of all diabetes cases[31] or 9 million cases worldwide.[4][127] Symptoms can begin at any age, but onset is most common in children, with diagnoses slightly more common in 5 to 7 year olds, and much more common around the age of puberty.[128][20] In contrast to most autoimmune diseases, type 1 diabetes is slightly more common in males than in females.[128]

In 2006, type 1 diabetes affected 440,000 children under 14 years of age and was the primary cause of diabetes in those less than 15 years of age.[129][31]

Rates vary widely by country and region. The incidence is highest in Scandinavia, at 30–60 new cases per 100,000 children per year, intermediate in the U.S. and Southern Europe at 10–20 cases per 100,000 per year, and lowest in China, much of Asia, and South America at 1–3 cases per 100,000 per year.[35]

In the United States, type 1 and 2 diabetes affected about 208,000 youths under the age of 20 in 2015. Over 18,000 youths are diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes every year. Every year, about 234,051 Americans die due to diabetes (type I or II) or diabetes-related complications, with 69,071 having it as the primary cause of death.[130]

In Australia, about one million people have been diagnosed with diabetes, and of this figure, 130,000 people have been diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. Australia ranks 6th-highest in the world with children under 14 years of age. Between 2000 and 2013, 31,895 new cases were established, with 2,323 in 2013, a rate of 10–13 cases per 100,00 people each year. Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islander people are less affected.[131][132]

Since the 1950s, the incidence of type 1 diabetes has been gradually increasing across the world by an average 3–4% per year.[35] The increase is more pronounced in countries that began with a lower incidence of type 1 diabetes.[35] A single 2023 study suggested a relationship between COVID-19 infection and the incidence of type 1 diabetes in children;[133] confirmatory studies have not appeared to date.

Type 1 diabetes in youth

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Type 1 diabetes, also known as "juvenile-onset" diabetes is increasing in children and adolescents under the age of 15.[134] Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease where the body attacks the beta-cells produced by the pancreas; therefore, causing the body to have insulin deficiency.[135] The number of diagnoses is increasing all around the world.[135]

Management with exercise

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Children with type 1 diabetes typically manage their blood sugar levels with regular insulin injections; however, exercise can also play a vital role in the management of type 1 diabetes.[134] For youth with type 1 diabetes, exercise is correlated with greater blood sugar control.[135] HbA1c levels are reduced significantly when children with type 1 diabetes participate in structured exercise interventions.[135] In one study, Garcia-Hermoso and colleagues found that high-intensity exercise, concurrent training, exercise intervention lasting 24 weeks or more, and exercise sessions lasting 60 minutes or more caused greater HbA1c reduction in children with type 1 diabetes.[135] Garcia-Hermoso and colleagues also observed that exercise sessions lasting 60 minutes or more, high-intensity exercise, and concurrent training interventions led to a decrease in insulin dosage per day.[135] Additionally, Petschnig and colleagues looked at the effect of strength training on blood sugar levels and they found that children with type 1 diabetes who performed strength training exercises for 17 weeks did not experience any change in HbA1c levels, but after 32 weeks of training experienced a significant decrease in HbA1c levels.[134] Petschnig and colleagues also observed blood sugar levels decrease significantly following strength training sessions.[134] Finally, the Diabetes Research in Children Network Study Group found that children who participated in prolonged aerobic exercise after school experienced a decrease in plasma glucose levels 40% below their baseline values.[136] The Diabetes Research in Children Network Study Group observed blood sugar levels decrease rapidly in the first 15 minutes of exercise and continue to drop during the 75-minute session.[136] The Diabetes Research Group also found that after participating in prolonged aerobic exercise, 83% of participants had at least a 25% decrease in blood sugar levels.[136] High-intensity and concurrent training interventions,[135] strength training,[134] and prolonged aerobic exercise[136] all have been shown to help reduce HbA1c and blood glucose levels in children with type 1 diabetes; therefore, demonstrating that exercise plays a vital role in the management of type 1 diabetes.[134]

History

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The connection between diabetes and pancreatic damage was first described by the German pathologist Martin Schmidt, who in a 1902 paper noted inflammation around the pancreatic islet of a child who had died of diabetes.[137] The connection between this inflammation and diabetes onset was further developed through the 1920s by Shields Warren, and the term "insulitis" was coined by Hanns von Meyenburg in 1940 to describe the phenomenon.[137]

Type 1 diabetes was described as an autoimmune disease in the 1970s, based on observations that autoantibodies against islets were discovered in diabetics with other autoimmune deficiencies.[138] It was also shown in the 1980s that immunosuppressive therapies could slow disease progression, further supporting the idea that type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disorder.[139] The name juvenile diabetes was used earlier as it is often first diagnosed in childhood.

Society and culture

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Type 1 and 2 diabetes was estimated to cause $10.5 billion in annual medical costs ($875 per month per diabetic) and an additional $4.4 billion in indirect costs ($366 per month per person with diabetes) in the U.S.[140] In the United States $245 billion every year is attributed to diabetes. Individuals diagnosed with diabetes have 2.3 times the health care costs as individuals who do not have diabetes. One in ten health care dollars is spent on individuals with type 1 and 2 diabetes.[130]

Research

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Funding for research into type 1 diabetes originates from the government, industry (e.g., pharmaceutical companies), and charitable organizations. Government funding in the United States is distributed via the National Institutes of Health, and in the UK via the National Institute for Health and Care Research or the Medical Research Council. The Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), founded by parents of children with type 1 diabetes, is the world's largest provider of charity-based funding for type 1 diabetes research.[141] Other charities include the American Diabetes Association, Diabetes UK, Diabetes Research and Wellness Foundation,[142] Diabetes Australia, and the Canadian Diabetes Association.

Artificial pancreas

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There has also been substantial effort to develop a fully automated insulin delivery system or "artificial pancreas" that could sense glucose levels and inject appropriate insulin without conscious input from the user.[143] Current "hybrid closed-loop systems" use a continuous glucose monitor to sense blood sugar levels, and a subcutaneous insulin pump to deliver insulin; however, due to the delay between insulin injection and its action, current systems require the user to initiate insulin before taking meals.[144] Several improvements to these systems are currently undergoing clinical trials in humans, including a dual-hormone system that injects glucagon in addition to insulin, and an implantable device that injects insulin intraperitoneally where it can be absorbed more quickly.[145]

Disease models

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Various animal models of disease are used to understand the pathogenesis and etiology of type 1 diabetes. Currently available models of T1D can be divided into spontaneously autoimmune, chemically induced, virus-induced, and genetically induced.[146]

The nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse is the most widely studied model of type 1 diabetes.[146] It is an inbred strain that spontaneously develops type 1 diabetes in 30–100% of female mice depending on housing conditions.[147] Diabetes in NOD mice is caused by several genes, primarily MHC genes involved in antigen presentation.[147] Like diabetic humans, NOD mice develop islet autoantibodies and inflammation in the islet, followed by reduced insulin production and hyperglycemia.[147][148] Some features of human diabetes are exaggerated in NOD mice, namely the mice have more severe islet inflammation than humans, and have a much more pronounced sex bias, with females developing diabetes far more frequently than males.[147] In NOD mice, the onset of insulitis occurs at 3–4 weeks of age. The islets of Langerhans are infiltrated by CD4+, CD8+ T lymphocytes, NK cells, B lymphocytes, dendritic cells, macrophages, and neutrophils, similar to the disease process in humans.[149] In addition to sex, breeding conditions, gut microbiome composition or diet also influence the onset of T1D.[150]

The BioBreeding Diabetes-Prone (BB) rat is another widely used spontaneous experimental model for T1D. The onset of diabetes occurs, in up to 90% of individuals (regardless of sex) at 8–16 weeks of age.[149] During insulitis, the pancreatic islets are infiltrated by T lymphocytes, B lymphocytes, macrophages, and NK cells, with the difference from the human course of insulitis being that CD4 + T lymphocytes are markedly reduced and CD8 + T lymphocytes are almost absent. The aforementioned lymphopenia is the major drawback of this model. The disease is characterized by hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, weight loss, ketonuria, and the need for insulin therapy for survival.[149] BB Rats are used to study the genetic aspects of T1D and are also used for interventional studies and diabetic nephropathy studies.[151]

LEW-1AR1 / -iddm rats are derived from congenital Lewis rats and represent a rarer spontaneous model for T1D. These rats develop diabetes at about 8–9 weeks of age with no sex differences, unlike NOD mice.[152] In LEW mice, diabetes presents with hyperglycemia, glycosuria, ketonuria, and polyuria.[153][149] The advantage of the model is the progression of the prediabetic phase, which is very similar to human disease, with infiltration of islet by immune cells about a week before hyperglycemia is observed. This model is suitable for intervention studies or for the search for predictive biomarkers. It is also possible to observe individual phases of pancreatic infiltration by immune cells. The advantage of congenic LEW mice is also the good viability after the manifestation of T1D (compared to NOD mice and BB rats).[154]

Chemically induced

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The chemical compounds aloxan and streptozotocin (STZ) are commonly used to induce diabetes and destroy β-cells in mouse/rat animal models.[149] In both cases, it is a cytotoxic analog of glucose that passes through GLUT2 transport and accumulates in β-cells, causing their destruction. The chemically induced destruction of β-cells leads to decreased insulin production, hyperglycemia, and weight loss in the experimental animal.[155] The animal models prepared in this way are suitable for research into blood sugar-lowering drugs and therapies (e.g., for testing new insulin preparations). They are also the most commonly used genetically induced T1D model is the so-called AKITA mouse (originally C57BL/6NSIc mouse). The development of diabetes in AKITA mice is caused by a spontaneous point mutation in the Ins2 gene, which is responsible for the correct composition of insulin in the endoplasmic reticulum. Decreased insulin production is then associated with hyperglycemia, polydipsia, and polyuria. If severe diabetes develops within 3–4 weeks, AKITA mice survive no longer than 12 weeks without treatment intervention. The description of the etiology of the disease shows that, unlike spontaneous models, the early stages of the disease are not accompanied by insulitis.[156] AKITA mice are used to test drugs targeting endoplasmic reticulum stress reduction, to test islet transplants, and to study diabetes-related complications such as nephropathy, sympathetic autonomic neuropathy, and vascular disease.[149][157] for testing transplantation therapies. Their advantage is mainly the low cost; the disadvantage is the cytotoxicity of the chemical compounds.[158]

Genetically induced

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Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a multifactorial autoimmune disease with a strong genetic component. Although environmental factors also play a significant role, the genetic susceptibility to T1D is well established, with several genes and loci implicated in disease development.

The most significant genetic contribution to T1D comes from the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region on chromosome 6p21.[159] The HLA class II genes, particularly HLA-DR and HLA-DQ, are the strongest genetic determinants of T1D risk. Specific combinations of alleles such as HLA-DR3-DQ2 and HLA-DR4-DQ8 have been associated with a higher risk of developing T1D.[160] Individuals carrying both of these haplotypes (heterozygous DR3/DR4) are at an even greater risk. These HLA variants are thought to influence the immune system's ability to differentiate between self and non-self antigens, leading to the autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells.[161]

Conversely, some HLA haplotypes, such as HLA-DR15-DQ6, are associated with protection against T1D, suggesting that variations in these immune-related genes can either predispose or protect against the disease.[162]

In addition to HLA, multiple non-HLA genes have been implicated in T1D susceptibility. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified over 50 loci associated with an increased risk of T1D.[163] Some of the most notable genes include:

  • INS: The insulin gene (INS) on chromosome 11p15 is one of the earliest identified non-HLA genes linked to T1D. A variable number tandem repeat (VNTR) polymorphism in the promoter region of the insulin gene affects its thymic expression, with certain alleles reducing the ability to develop immune tolerance to insulin, a key autoantigen in T1D.[164]
  • PTPN22: This gene encodes a protein tyrosine phosphatase involved in T-cell receptor signaling. A common single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), R620W, in the PTPN22 gene is associated with an increased risk of T1D and other autoimmune diseases, suggesting its role in modulating immune responses.[165]
  • IL2RA: The interleukin-2 receptor alpha (IL2RA) gene, located on chromosome 10p15, plays a crucial role in regulating immune tolerance and T-cell activation. Variants in IL2RA affect the susceptibility to T1D by altering the function of regulatory T-cells, which help maintain immune homeostasis.[166]
  • CTLA4: The cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4) gene is another immune-related gene associated with T1D. CTLA4 acts as a negative regulator of T-cell activation, and certain variants are linked to impaired immune regulation and a higher risk of autoimmunity.

T1D is considered a polygenic disease, meaning that multiple genes contribute to its development. While individual genes confer varying degrees of risk, it is the combination of several genetic factors, along with environmental triggers, that ultimately leads to disease onset.[167] Family studies show that T1D has a relatively high heritability, with siblings of affected individuals having about a 6–10% risk of developing the disease, compared to a 0.3% risk in the general population.[168]

The risk of T1D is also influenced by the presence of affected first-degree relatives. For instance, children of fathers with T1D have a higher risk of developing the disease compared to children of mothers with T1D. Monozygotic (identical) twins have a concordance rate of about 30–50%, highlighting the importance of both genetic and environmental factors in disease onset.[160]

Recent research has also focused on the role of epigenetics and gene-environment interactions in T1D development.[169] Environmental factors such as viral infections, early childhood diet, and gut microbiome composition are thought to trigger the autoimmune process in genetically susceptible individuals.[170] Epigenetic modifications, such as DNA methylation and histone modifications, may influence gene expression in response to these environmental triggers, further modulating the risk of developing T1D.

While much progress has been made in understanding the genetic basis of T1D, ongoing research aims to unravel the complex interplay between genetic susceptibility, immune regulation, and environmental influences that contribute to disease pathogenesis.[171]

Virally induced

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Viral infections play a role in the development of several autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes. However, the mechanisms by which viruses are involved in the induction of type 1 DM are not fully understood. Virus-induced models are used to study the etiology and pathogenesis of the disease, in particular the mechanisms by which environmental factors contribute to or protect against the occurrence of type 1 DM.[172] Among the most commonly used are coxsackievirus, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, encephalomyocarditis virus, and Kilham rat virus. Examples of virus-induced animals include NOD mice infected with coxsackie B4 that developed type 1 DM within two weeks.[173]

References

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Works cited

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Type 1 diabetes is a chronic in which the body's mistakenly attacks and destroys the insulin-producing beta cells in the , leading to little or no insulin production. Insulin, a essential for transporting glucose from the bloodstream into cells to generate energy, is therefore deficient, causing blood glucose levels to rise to dangerous heights if untreated. This condition, also known as insulin-dependent , typically develops in children, adolescents, or young adults but can onset at any age, requiring lifelong management to prevent life-threatening complications. The most common symptoms of type 1 diabetes emerge rapidly, often over a few weeks, and include excessive thirst (polydipsia), frequent urination (polyuria), extreme hunger (polyphagia), unexplained weight loss, fatigue, irritability, and blurred vision. In children, bed-wetting may occur after previous toilet training, while severe cases can progress to diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), characterized by nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, rapid breathing, and a fruity odor on the breath due to ketone buildup. These symptoms arise from hyperglycemia and dehydration, underscoring the need for prompt medical attention to avoid acute emergencies. The precise cause of type 1 diabetes remains unknown, but it involves a combination of genetic predisposition and environmental triggers, such as viral infections, that prompt the autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells. Risk factors include a family history of the disease, certain gene variants associated with autoimmunity, and geographic location, with higher incidence rates observed farther from the equator. Unlike type 2 diabetes, it is not linked to lifestyle factors like obesity and accounts for approximately 2% of all diabetes cases worldwide (though up to 5-10% in high-income countries). In contrast, remission is possible for many people with type 2 diabetes through lifestyle interventions such as weight loss and dietary changes, or other treatments, allowing discontinuation of medication. For type 1 diabetes, remission is generally not possible with standard insulin therapy, but insulin independence is achievable in about 50% of islet transplantation recipients for several years, and through emerging stem cell therapies in individual cases and clinical trial data as of 2025. In 2025, an estimated 9.5 million people globally live with type 1 diabetes, including 1.85 million individuals under 20 years old, while in the United States, approximately 1.7 million adults are affected. Diagnosis of type 1 diabetes is confirmed through blood tests measuring glucose levels, such as the A1C test (≥6.5% indicating ), fasting plasma glucose (≥126 mg/dL), or random plasma glucose (≥200 mg/dL with symptoms). tests and urine ketone checks further distinguish it from other forms of . Treatment centers on lifelong insulin replacement therapy, delivered via multiple daily injections, insulin pens, or continuous subcutaneous infusion pumps, alongside frequent using finger sticks or continuous glucose monitors (CGMs). There is no proven natural cure or substitute for insulin therapy in type 1 diabetes, which requires lifelong insulin management. Some people with type 1 diabetes have tried complementary and alternative approaches, including herbal supplements such as cinnamon, fenugreek, bitter melon, berberine/silymarin combinations, and others, as well as mind-body practices like relaxation training and guided imagery, in efforts to support glycemic control; however, these are not recommended by major health organizations as effective treatments and should not replace conventional care. A balanced diet emphasizing counting, regular (at least 150 minutes per week), and on prevention are integral to maintaining target blood glucose levels (80-130 mg/dL before meals and <180 mg/dL after). Without effective management, type 1 diabetes heightens the risk of serious complications, including cardiovascular disease, kidney failure (nephropathy), nerve damage (neuropathy), vision loss from retinopathy, and foot ulcers leading to amputations. It also increases susceptibility to infections, skin conditions, and hearing impairment, while pregnancy poses risks like birth defects if glycemic control is poor. Advances in technology, such as hybrid closed-loop insulin delivery systems, and ongoing research into immunotherapies and beta cell regeneration offer hope for improved outcomes, though no cure exists.

Clinical presentation

Signs and symptoms

The classic signs and symptoms of type 1 diabetes arise from hyperglycemia and include increased urination (polyuria), excessive thirst (polydipsia), heightened hunger (polyphagia), and unexplained weight loss. These occur because insufficient insulin leads to elevated blood glucose levels, causing glucose to spill into the urine (glucosuria), which draws excess water into the urine and triggers osmotic diuresis. Although uncommon, hypoglycemia can occur before the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes in some patients with early-stage type 1A (autoimmune) diabetes prior to insulin therapy, with one retrospective study reporting hypoglycemic episodes in approximately 6.9% of cases, possibly due to erratic residual insulin secretion. Additional initial symptoms often include fatigue, blurred vision, and recurrent infections, such as slow-healing cuts or bruises. In children, particularly those previously toilet-trained, bedwetting may emerge as a notable sign, alongside irritability or mood changes in infants and young children, and heightened hunger (polyphagia) that may manifest as craving sweets due to the body's inability to use glucose properly, resulting in intense hunger despite eating. Symptoms typically develop rapidly over a few days to weeks in children but more insidiously over months in adults. In adults, symptoms may develop more gradually and sometimes be mistaken for . The average age of onset is around 7 to 15 years, with peaks between 4-7 and 10-14 years, though it can occur at any age. If untreated, these manifestations can progress to acute complications such as .

Acute onset features

The most common acute onset feature of type 1 diabetes is diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), a life-threatening metabolic emergency characterized by hyperglycemia, ketosis, and metabolic acidosis resulting from insulin deficiency. It often presents rapidly in undiagnosed individuals, particularly children and adolescents, leading to decompensation if not recognized promptly. Symptoms of DKA include nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain, which may mimic acute abdominal conditions; rapid, deep breathing known as Kussmaul respirations to compensate for acidosis; a fruity odor on the breath due to acetone; and altered mental status ranging from lethargy to confusion or coma. Clinical recognition relies on these signs alongside laboratory findings such as arterial pH below 7.3, serum bicarbonate less than 18 mEq/L, and an elevated anion gap greater than 10 mEq/L, confirming the diagnosis in the context of hyperglycemia and ketonemia. DKA occurs in 13-80% of new type 1 diabetes diagnoses globally, with rates around 30-40% in U.S. youth under 18 years; recent data as of 2025 indicate increasing incidence in some regions, reaching over 50% in certain cohorts depending on demographics. Hyperglycemic hyperosmolar state (HHS), another severe hyperglycemic emergency, is rare in type 1 diabetes but can occur at onset, typically featuring profound dehydration, extreme hyperglycemia without significant ketosis, and neurological alterations like drowsiness or seizures. Critical signs include severe volume depletion leading to shock, with symptoms developing more gradually than in DKA, often over days, and an incidence of less than 1% among type 1 cases. In pediatric patients, DKA carries additional risks, including encephalopathy from severe acidosis and, most critically, cerebral edema, which affects 0.3-0.9% of cases but accounts for 21-24% of DKA-related mortality. Management involves prompt administration of intravenous fluids and insulin to reverse the crisis.

Causes

Genetic factors

Type 1 diabetes has a strong genetic component, with heritability estimates ranging from 50% to 80% based on twin and family studies. The disease exhibits a polygenic inheritance pattern, where multiple genetic variants contribute to susceptibility rather than a single Mendelian gene. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified over 50 susceptibility loci, with the majority conferring modest effects on risk. Recent analyses as of 2025 highlight genetic heterogeneity, with over 10% of cases lacking high-risk HLA-DR3 or DR4 haplotypes and showing later onset. Twin studies underscore the genetic influence, showing concordance rates of 30-50% in monozygotic twins compared to less than 10% in dizygotic twins. Family risks further highlight heritability: the lifetime risk is approximately 5% if a sibling is affected and 1-4% if a parent is affected, compared to a general population risk of about 0.4%. Despite this familial clustering, approximately 80-90% of individuals diagnosed with type 1 diabetes have no family history of the disease. The strongest genetic associations are with genes in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region on chromosome 6, which account for 30-50% of the genetic risk. Specifically, the and haplotypes are major risk factors, increasing susceptibility by 10-15 fold in carriers, with the DR3/DR4 heterozygous combination conferring even higher odds ratios exceeding 10. Other non-HLA loci involved in immune regulation include the insulin gene (INS) on chromosome 11, which contributes about 10% to genetic risk through variable number tandem repeat (VNTR) polymorphisms; protein tyrosine phosphatase non-receptor type 22 (PTPN22), with the R620W variant raising odds ratios of 2-3; and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4), where polymorphisms like +49 G/A modestly elevate risk by 1.1-1.2 fold. These genetic factors interact with environmental triggers to initiate a gradual autoimmune process leading to beta cell destruction over months or years in susceptible individuals.

Environmental triggers

Environmental triggers play a crucial role in precipitating (T1D) among genetically susceptible individuals, often initiating or accelerating autoimmune processes against pancreatic beta cells. Viral infections are among the most studied precipitants, with —particularly coxsackievirus B—showing the strongest epidemiological associations with T1D onset. These viruses have been detected more frequently in the pancreatic islets and stools of children developing T1D compared to controls, and prospective studies indicate that enterovirus infections precede the appearance of islet autoantibodies by months to years. Recent 2024-2025 research confirms 'live', replicating in the pancreas at diagnosis, potentially sustaining autoimmunity through persistent infection. and have also been implicated, with congenital rubella infection historically linked to a significantly elevated T1D risk in affected cohorts. Such infections may contribute through mechanisms like , where viral proteins resemble beta cell antigens, potentially triggering autoimmunity. In contrast to viral infections, parasitic infections have not been established as environmental triggers for type 1 diabetes. No known parasite causes T1D by infecting the human pancreas and blocking insulin production. Claims that the "pancreatic fluke" (Eurytrema pancreaticum) causes diabetes originate from the pseudoscientific writings of Hulda Clark; human infections with this parasite are extremely rare, accidental (typically via ingestion of infected insects such as grasshoppers), and have no documented link to diabetes or impaired insulin production. Some research has investigated a potential association between the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii and type 1 diabetes. Observational studies have reported higher seroprevalence of T. gondii antibodies in individuals with T1D in certain populations, and experimental animal models have demonstrated that the parasite can invade pancreatic beta cells, leading to reduced insulin expression, increased beta cell apoptosis, and impaired glucose regulation. However, results across human studies are inconsistent, with meta-analyses indicating a potential positive association (pooled OR 2.45, 95% CI 0.91–6.61) but with substantial heterogeneity and no definitive evidence of causation in humans. Early dietary exposures, particularly to cow's milk proteins, have been hypothesized to influence T1D risk within the framework of the hygiene hypothesis, which posits that reduced early-life microbial exposure in sanitized environments may heighten autoimmune susceptibility. Prospective cohort studies suggest that early introduction of cow's milk formula—before 3 months of age—increases the odds of islet autoimmunity, potentially due to bovine insulin or other proteins mimicking human beta cell components. Conversely, prolonged breastfeeding appears protective, with meta-analyses showing a 15-30% reduced T1D risk associated with exclusive breastfeeding for at least 3-6 months, possibly by modulating gut immunity and delaying foreign protein exposure. These findings underscore the hygiene hypothesis, as lower infection rates in developed settings correlate with higher T1D incidence. Epidemiological patterns reveal geographic and seasonal variations in T1D incidence, pointing to environmental influences like sunlight and climate. Incidence rates are higher at latitudes farther from the equator, with a gradient showing up to 3-5% increased risk per degree of distance, likely tied to reduced ultraviolet B exposure and consequent vitamin D synthesis. Vitamin D deficiency has been linked to elevated T1D risk, as supplementation trials and observational data indicate that sufficient levels (above 30 ng/mL) correlate with 20-50% lower autoimmunity rates in at-risk children. Seasonally, T1D diagnoses peak in winter across many regions, with amplitudes of 20-25% higher incidence during colder months, aligning with diminished sunlight and potential viral circulation. Notably, while T1D rates have stabilized or plateaued in some high-income countries, they continue to rise in developing nations, with annual increases of 3-5% reported in parts of , , and , reflecting rapid urbanization and dietary shifts. Emerging research highlights alterations in the gut microbiome as a potential environmental trigger for T1D, with dysbiosis preceding disease onset in susceptible individuals. Children who later develop T1D exhibit reduced microbial diversity and shifts toward lower levels of butyrate-producing bacteria like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, which support gut barrier integrity and anti-inflammatory responses. These changes, observed in longitudinal studies from birth, may enhance intestinal permeability, allowing antigens to provoke systemic autoimmunity. Recent 2025 studies show functional and metabolic shifts in the microbiome associated with T1D progression, with potential for probiotic interventions to delay autoantibody appearance. Interventions targeting the microbiome, such as probiotics, show preliminary promise in delaying autoantibody progression in trial subsets.

Other contributing factors

In addition to genetic and common environmental factors, certain chemicals and drugs can induce type 1 diabetes through direct beta cell toxicity. Pentamidine, an antiprotozoal medication used for treating infections like in immunocompromised patients, has been associated with acute hyperglycemia and insulin deficiency by damaging pancreatic beta cells, often presenting as a type 1-like diabetic ketoacidosis. Similarly, vacor, a rodenticide containing N-3-pyridylmethyl-N'-p-nitrophenyl urea, causes selective destruction of beta cells via inhibition of poly-ADP-ribose polymerase, leading to permanent insulin dependence if ingestion occurs; early intervention with nicotinamide may mitigate damage. Interferon-alpha, used in treatments for and certain cancers, can trigger autoimmune beta cell destruction, resulting in type 1 diabetes in susceptible individuals, with incidence rates up to 1% in treated cohorts. Post-operative or inflammatory conditions affecting the pancreas can also lead to insulin deficiency resembling type 1 diabetes. Total pancreatectomy, performed for conditions like chronic pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer, inevitably causes absolute insulin deficiency due to complete removal of beta cells, requiring lifelong insulin therapy as a form of surgically induced type 1 diabetes. In cystic fibrosis-related diabetes (CFRD), progressive pancreatic damage from fibrosis and recurrent inflammation destroys beta cells, leading to insulinopenia that shares features with type 1 diabetes, though often with preserved insulin secretion initially and elements of insulin resistance; this affects up to 50% of adults with cystic fibrosis and is classified as a distinct form. Acute or chronic pancreatitis can similarly impair beta cell function, occasionally precipitating type 1-like insulin deficiency through inflammatory destruction. Drug-induced cases of type 1 diabetes may be reversible if detected early and the offending agent discontinued, as beta cell toxicity can sometimes allow partial recovery of insulin production. Type 1 diabetes is frequently associated with other autoimmune diseases, such as autoimmune thyroiditis, where shared genetic and immunological triggers contribute to polyglandular autoimmune syndromes, increasing the risk of concurrent thyroid dysfunction in up to 30% of type 1 diabetes patients. This overlap highlights the autoimmune underpinnings in these secondary contributing factors.

Pathogenesis

Autoimmune mechanisms

Type 1 diabetes is characterized by an aberrant autoimmune response in which the immune system targets and destroys insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreatic islets. This process is primarily T-cell mediated, involving autoreactive CD4+ helper T cells that orchestrate the immune attack and CD8+ cytotoxic T cells that directly infiltrate and eliminate beta cells. Autoreactive B cells also contribute by acting as antigen-presenting cells and producing pro-inflammatory cytokines, amplifying the T-cell response. These T cells recognize specific islet autoantigens, including glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), insulinoma-associated antigen-2 (IA-2), and insulin itself, leading to the initiation of beta cell destruction. Autoantibodies against islet antigens, such as anti-GAD, anti-IA-2, and anti-islet cell antibodies, serve as diagnostic markers of ongoing autoimmunity but do not directly cause beta cell damage. These antibodies appear in the serum of affected individuals and are used to identify risk and confirm the autoimmune etiology, though their precise role remains supportive rather than effector. The autoimmune process begins in a preclinical phase, often years before clinical symptoms emerge, during which autoreactive T cells and autoantibodies develop insidiously. This phase reflects a loss of immune tolerance, potentially due to thymic dysfunction in central tolerance or failures in peripheral regulatory mechanisms, such as impaired function of regulatory T cells. Genetic factors, particularly certain human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II alleles like and , contribute to this susceptibility by influencing antigen presentation and T-cell selection. Inflammation plays a key amplifying role in the autoimmune attack, driven by proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and interferon-gamma (IFN-γ), which are secreted by infiltrating immune cells. These cytokines enhance T-cell activation, promote islet inflammation (insulitis), and exacerbate beta cell vulnerability, thereby accelerating the progression toward overt disease.

Beta cell destruction

Type 1 diabetes involves the progressive autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells, which constitute 50-70% of the cells within the islets of Langerhans. This destruction is primarily driven by insulitis, the infiltration of immune cells such as CD8+ T cells and macrophages into the islets, leading to both apoptosis and necrosis of beta cells. Apoptosis occurs through cytokine-mediated pathways, including interferon-gamma and interleukin-1 beta, which activate caspases and induce endoplasmic reticulum stress, while necrosis results from perforin/granzyme release by cytotoxic T cells and reactive oxygen species accumulation. These processes culminate in the loss of insulin-producing capacity, with immune infiltrates causing direct cytolysis and inflammatory damage. Clinical hyperglycemia typically manifests after a near-total depletion of beta cell mass, exceeding 80-90% loss, as residual cells can no longer compensate for insulin demand. Following diagnosis, a honeymoon phase may occur, characterized by transient residual beta cell function that partially restores insulin secretion and reduces exogenous insulin requirements, often lasting months before full depletion. This phase reflects incomplete initial destruction, with surviving beta cells temporarily protected or recovering amid ongoing autoimmunity. The destruction of beta cells is uneven across the pancreas, with heterogeneous insulitic profiles leading to variable islet involvement and regional differences in cell loss. In animal models like non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice, which recapitulate human type 1 diabetes pathogenesis, beta cell destruction follows similar patterns of progressive insulitis, T cell-mediated apoptosis, and necrosis, starting peripherally and advancing centrally. These models demonstrate that immune assault targets beta cells selectively, sparing other islet components initially. Post-destruction, beta cell neogenesis and regeneration are severely impaired in type 1 diabetes due to persistent inflammation, genetic predispositions, and exhaustion of progenitor pools, preventing meaningful recovery of functional mass. This limited regenerative capacity underscores the irreversible nature of beta cell loss, with therapeutic efforts focusing on halting ongoing destruction rather than robust replenishment.

Islet cell dysfunction

In type 1 diabetes, alpha cells exhibit hyperglucagonemia, characterized by inappropriately elevated glucagon secretion that contributes to postprandial hyperglycemia by stimulating hepatic glucose production despite high blood glucose levels. This dysregulation is a hallmark of the disease, observed in the majority of patients with uncontrolled type 1 diabetes, where glucagon levels fail to suppress adequately in response to rising glucose. Furthermore, alpha cells show impaired glucagon release during hypoglycemia, reducing the counterregulatory response needed to restore euglycemia and increasing the risk of severe hypoglycemic events. Following the autoimmune destruction of beta cells, alpha cells undergo hyperplasia, expanding their mass to partially compensate for lost islet function, as evidenced in human pancreases from type 1 diabetes donors and animal models of beta cell injury. This proliferation occurs paradoxically in the context of insulin deficiency, potentially driven by paracrine signals from damaged islets, though it does not fully restore normal glucagon regulation. Delta cells, which secrete somatostatin, display alterations in type 1 diabetes that lead to dysregulated somatostatin release, exacerbating glucose variability by inadequately inhibiting alpha and beta cell activity during meals. Similarly, pancreatic polypeptide (PP) cells show reduced secretion in response to nutrient intake, impairing the cephalic phase of incretin responses and contributing to delayed gastric regulation and overall metabolic instability. Amylin (islet amyloid polypeptide, IAPP), co-secreted with insulin from beta cells, is deficient in type 1 diabetes due to beta cell loss, leading to diminished satiety signaling and accelerated gastric emptying that worsens postprandial glucose excursions. This hormonal imbalance can indirectly promote hypoglycemia unawareness by altering counterregulatory dynamics.

Diagnosis

Diagnostic tests

The diagnosis of type 1 diabetes relies on demonstrating hyperglycemia through standardized laboratory tests, alongside clinical features suggestive of insulin deficiency. According to the 2025 American Diabetes Association (ADA) Standards of Care, diabetes is diagnosed if fasting plasma glucose is ≥126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L), random plasma glucose is ≥200 mg/dL (11.1 mmol/L) in the presence of classic symptoms of hyperglycemia or hyperglycemic crisis, 2-hour plasma glucose during a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) is ≥200 mg/dL (11.1 mmol/L), or HbA1c is ≥6.5% (48 mmol/mol). These criteria apply to type 1 diabetes, though confirmation typically requires additional tests to distinguish it from other forms, such as type 2 diabetes, where autoantibody presence supports an autoimmune etiology. Autoantibody testing is essential for confirming the autoimmune basis of type 1 diabetes. The primary autoantibodies include those against glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), insulinoma-associated protein 2 (IA-2), islet cell cytoplasm (ICA), and zinc transporter 8 (ZnT8). These are detected in approximately 85-95% of individuals at diagnosis, with multiple autoantibodies increasing diagnostic certainty. The 2025 ADA standards recommend screening with GAD, IA-2, or ZnT8 autoantibodies, emphasizing their role in identifying immune-mediated diabetes. C-peptide measurement assesses endogenous insulin production and helps confirm beta-cell failure in type 1 diabetes. Levels are typically low or undetectable (<0.24 ng/mL or <80 pmol/L in a random sample taken within 5 hours of eating), indicating severe insulin deficiency, whereas levels ≥1.8 ng/mL (≥600 pmol/L) generally rule it out. The 2025 ADA guidelines highlight C-peptide as a key tool for evaluating residual beta-cell function at diagnosis. Genetic testing is not routinely used for diagnosing type 1 diabetes due to its complex polygenic nature but may be considered in atypical cases to rule out monogenic forms. The 2025 ADA standards note that such testing is reserved for scenarios with unusual clinical features, such as early-onset or family history suggestive of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY). Urine ketone testing is performed to screen for diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), a common acute presentation in type 1 diabetes. Positive ketones, detected via urine dipstick or blood beta-hydroxybutyrate measurement, prompt immediate evaluation for acidosis and guide urgent insulin therapy. The 2025 ADA standards emphasize the use of point-of-care testing for HbA1c and glucose when performed with FDA-approved devices in certified laboratories, facilitating rapid diagnosis in clinical settings.

Classification and staging

Type 1 diabetes is distinguished from type 2 diabetes primarily by its autoimmune etiology, leading to absolute insulin deficiency due to destruction of pancreatic beta cells, whereas type 2 involves insulin resistance with relative insulin deficiency and is not autoimmune. It typically presents at a younger age, often before 35 years, though onset can occur at any age. Within type 1 diabetes, the autoimmune form (type 1A) is the most common, characterized by the presence of islet autoantibodies, while the idiopathic form (type 1B), lacking autoantibodies and evidence of autoimmunity, is rare and accounts for a small fraction of cases. A standardized staging system for type 1 diabetes was established in 2015 by the , the , and JDRF to facilitate early identification and intervention. Stage 1 is defined by the presence of two or more islet autoantibodies with normoglycemia, indicating presymptomatic autoimmunity but no dysglycemia. Stage 2 involves two or more islet autoantibodies plus dysglycemia (such as abnormal glucose tolerance or HbA1c between 5.7% and 6.4%), remaining presymptomatic. Stage 3 marks the onset of clinical diabetes with symptomatic hyperglycemia and insulin dependency. This progression occurs sequentially but at variable rates, with lifetime risk approaching 100% for stages 1 and 2. Several variants of type 1 diabetes highlight its heterogeneity in progression. Latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA), a slow-progressing form of type 1 diabetes, typically onset after age 30 and is characterized by positive beta-cell autoantibodies but no initial insulin requirement for at least six months post-diagnosis. In contrast, fulminant type 1 diabetes, more prevalent in East Asian populations, features rapid onset with severe ketoacidosis, near-absent C-peptide, and often negative autoantibodies, accounting for about 20% of ketosis-onset type 1 cases in Japan. Following diagnosis in stage 3, many patients experience a honeymoon phase of partial remission, where residual beta-cell function temporarily reduces insulin needs; this occurs in 18% to 72% of cases, most commonly within three months of insulin initiation and lasting a mean of seven months. Genetic risk scoring aids in stratifying risk across stages, particularly for presymptomatic individuals with autoantibodies. A type 1 diabetes genetic risk score (GRS), derived from multiple single nucleotide polymorphisms (e.g., 30 associated variants), predicts progression from single to multiple autoantibodies and to clinical disease, with higher scores (e.g., >0.295) associated with hazard ratios up to 2.27 for faster advancement. When combined with autoantibody status and other factors like age, GRS improves predictive accuracy (AUC 0.73-0.79 over 5-7 years), enabling precision risk assessment in at-risk relatives.

Management

Insulin replacement

Insulin replacement therapy is the cornerstone of for type 1 diabetes, as it directly addresses the absolute insulin deficiency caused by autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells. Exogenous insulin administration mimics the physiological patterns of basal (background) and bolus (mealtime) secretion to maintain euglycemia, preventing and its complications while minimizing risks. The (ADA) recommends insulin analogs over human insulins due to their association with lower rates of , reduced , and improved A1C levels. The standard regimen is basal-bolus therapy, which can be delivered via multiple daily injections (MDI) or continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) using an . Basal insulin, comprising approximately 30–50% of the total daily dose (TDD), provides steady coverage between meals and overnight; common options include long-acting analogs such as (U-100 or U-300 formulations) and insulin degludec, which offer once-daily dosing with minimal peaks and durations up to 42 hours for degludec. Bolus insulin covers prandial needs and corrects ; rapid-acting analogs like and are typically used, administered immediately before or with meals. CSII delivers basal insulin continuously and allows programmable bolus doses, improving A1C by about 0.3% and reducing severe compared to MDI. The TDD typically ranges from 0.4 to 1.0 units/kg/day in adults, with higher requirements (up to 1.0–1.5 units/kg/day) during due to effects on . Doses are individualized using insulin-to- ratios (e.g., 1 unit per 10–15 grams of ) and correction factors, adjusted every 3–6 months based on glucose patterns, activity, and illness to avoid over-insulinization, which increases risk (e.g., 62 episodes per 100 person-years in intensive per DCCT findings). Recent advancements include ultra-rapid-acting insulins, such as faster-acting (Fiasp), which accelerates absorption for better postprandial control and reduced early when used in . Inhaled insulin options like Afrezza (technosphere ) provide rapid onset (within 12 minutes) as a alternative, demonstrating comparable safety, function, and to injectable analogs in , including in children as of 2025 studies. formation is rare with insulin analogs, occurring at low levels (e.g., treatment-emergent antibodies in <5% of users) and rarely impacting glycemic control. As an adjunct to insulin for improved postprandial glucose control, pramlintide—a synthetic analog—is approved for type 1 diabetes, reducing A1C by 0.3–0.4% and body weight by about 1 kg when added to mealtime insulin, though it requires dose reductions in basal and bolus insulin to mitigate and . This therapy integrates briefly with continuous glucose monitoring for timely adjustments in automated systems. In select overweight or obese adults with type 1 diabetes exhibiting insulin resistance and requiring high insulin doses, metformin may be considered as adjunct therapy to reduce insulin requirements, support weight management, and modestly improve glycemic control. Sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, such as dapagliflozin or empagliflozin, may be used in some regions for adults to enhance blood glucose control, promote weight reduction, and offer cardioprotective effects, although evidence remains limited, use is often off-label with risks including diabetic ketoacidosis, and approval varies (e.g., not in China).

Lifestyle and monitoring

Effective lifestyle management in type 1 diabetes involves precise carbohydrate counting and meal planning to align insulin doses with nutrient intake, enabling better glycemic control. Individuals calculate the grams of carbohydrates in meals using food labels or databases, then apply a personalized insulin-to-carbohydrate to determine mealtime insulin needs, often with guidance from a registered . This approach prioritizes nutrient-dense, high-fiber foods while adjusting for high-protein or high-fat meals that may delay glucose absorption. Regular is recommended, with adults aiming for at least 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity , spread over at least three days, combined with resistance training two to three times weekly. To prevent exercise-induced , frequent is essential, targeting pre-exercise levels of 90-250 mg/dL, along with strategies like reducing insulin doses by 20-75% or consuming 10-60 grams of carbohydrates per hour depending on intensity and duration. Self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) four to ten times daily remains a core practice for those not using continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), but CGM is preferred for all individuals with type 1 diabetes to achieve tighter control. CGM targets include spending more than 70% of time in range (70-180 mg/dL), less than 4% below 70 mg/dL, and less than 25% above 180 mg/dL, based on 10-14 days of data. Insulin dosing can be adjusted in real-time using CGM trends to minimize variability. Advancements in CGM as of 2025 include the Eversense 365 system, an implantable providing up to one year of continuous glucose readings for adults with type 1 diabetes, reducing the need for frequent sensor replacements compared to traditional 10-14 day devices. Diabetes self-management education (DSME) programs, delivered at and annually, equip individuals with skills for daily and have been shown to reduce A1C by 0.5-1% through structured support on nutrition, monitoring, and coping. During illness, sick day rules emphasize checking blood glucose every four hours, testing urine for ketones if levels exceed 250 mg/dL, continuing insulin even if appetite is low, and consuming 50 grams of carbohydrates every four hours via easy-to-digest foods like or crackers. Seek immediate medical help for persistent vomiting, fever over 101°F, or positive ketones to prevent . Psychological support is integral for adherence, with annual screening for diabetes distress, anxiety, and fear of hypoglycemia using validated tools, followed by interventions like cognitive behavioral therapy or peer support to address barriers and improve self-management outcomes.

Complementary and alternative approaches

Type 1 diabetes requires lifelong insulin therapy, as there is no proven natural cure or substitute for insulin replacement. People with type 1 diabetes worldwide have tried complementary and alternative approaches, including herbal supplements such as cinnamon, fenugreek, bitter melon, berberine/silymarin combinations, and others, as well as mind-body practices like relaxation training and guided imagery, in efforts to support glycemic control. These approaches are not recommended by major health organizations as effective treatments and should not replace conventional care, including insulin therapy.

Advanced therapies

Islet cell transplantation involves infusing insulin-producing beta cells from donor pancreases into patients with type 1 diabetes, typically those with severe hypoglycemia unawareness or labile glucose control, often combined with kidney transplantation in cases of end-stage renal disease. This procedure aims to restore endogenous insulin production, reducing reliance on exogenous insulin. Success is measured by insulin independence, with approximately 80-90% of recipients achieving it at one year post-transplant, though rates decline to around 50% by five years due to factors like immune rejection and beta cell exhaustion. Long-term graft survival averages 5.9 years, with improved glycemic control and reduced severe hypoglycemic events in most patients. Pancreas transplantation, either alone (PTA) or simultaneous with (SPK), provides a whole organ replacement for select type 1 diabetes patients facing life-threatening complications. Insulin independence rates reach 93% at one year for PTA and remain higher in SPK recipients, with about 70% sustained at five years, outperforming transplantation in durability. However, it requires lifelong , increasing and risks, and is contraindicated in patients with significant due to perioperative mortality concerns. Hybrid closed-loop artificial pancreas systems integrate continuous glucose monitoring with insulin pumps to automate basal insulin delivery, adjusting doses in real-time based on glucose trends while requiring user-initiated boluses for meals. These systems improve time in target glucose range by 10-15% compared to conventional therapy, reducing in adults and children with type 1 diabetes. In 2025, the FDA approved expansions for next-generation pumps like the MiniMed 780G and t:slim X2, enhancing and with monitoring devices. Gene therapy trials targeting immune modulation represent an emerging frontier, aiming to reprogram autoreactive T cells or protect beta cells from destruction without broad . Preclinical studies in 2025 demonstrated conversion of alpha cells to insulin-secreting beta-like cells in diabetic models, normalizing glucose levels. For overweight individuals with type 1 diabetes, such as Roux-en-Y gastric bypass induces substantial (20-30% of body weight) and enhances insulin sensitivity, lowering daily insulin requirements by up to 50% and improving glycemic control. These benefits persist long-term, reducing cardiometabolic risks, though postoperative adjustments in insulin dosing are essential to avoid .

Complications

Acute complications

Acute complications of type 1 diabetes primarily involve life-threatening metabolic crises resulting from extreme deviations in blood glucose levels, including severe and (DKA). These events can arise from imbalances in insulin administration, dietary intake, or external stressors, underscoring the importance of vigilant management to prevent rapid deterioration. Severe , defined as an requiring assistance for recovery, manifests with symptoms such as sweating, tremors, , seizures, and loss of consciousness, often triggered by excess insulin dosing, skipped meals, or intense . In individuals with type 1 diabetes, the annual incidence of all hypoglycemic episodes ranges from 20 to 50 per patient, while severe events occur in approximately 30-40% of patients yearly, with an incidence of 1.0-1.7 episodes per patient. The risk of severe hypoglycemia is significantly higher at night, where reduced symptom awareness can lead to prolonged episodes and greater danger. Treatment involves immediate administration of fast-acting carbohydrates for mild cases or kits for severe instances, which rapidly raise blood glucose by stimulating hepatic . Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) recurrence in type 1 diabetes is commonly precipitated by infections, insulin non-compliance, or insulin delivery failures such as pump malfunctions, leading to , ketonemia, and . Prevention strategies emphasize regular ketone monitoring, particularly during illness or elevated blood glucose, using urine strips or ketone meters to detect early buildup and prompt timely insulin adjustments or medical intervention. Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS) can occur in adults with type 1 diabetes and presents with profound , neurological symptoms, and mortality rates up to 20%, often triggered by similar factors as DKA but with minimal . Its incidence in type 1 diabetes is estimated at 16.5 per 10,000 person-years among adults with known disease. Recent advancements, such as continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems, have demonstrated substantial benefits in mitigating these risks; for instance, CGM adoption has been associated with a 17-72% reduction in hypoglycemic events and hospitalizations, particularly nocturnal ones, by providing real-time alerts and trend data. Poor management practices, including inconsistent insulin use, further exacerbate the likelihood of these acute events.

Long-term complications

Sustained in type 1 diabetes leads to microvascular and macrovascular complications through mechanisms such as advanced glycation end-product formation, , and . Microvascular sequelae primarily affect the , kidneys, and peripheral nerves, while macrovascular issues accelerate and increase cardiovascular events. Intensive glycemic control, targeting an HbA1c below 7%, significantly mitigates these risks, as demonstrated by landmark trials. Diabetic retinopathy, the leading cause of blindness in working-age adults with diabetes, manifests as non-proliferative changes early and can progress to proliferative retinopathy with neovascularization. After 20 years of type 1 diabetes, nearly 99% of patients exhibit some degree of , with proliferative forms developing in 20-40% of cases, particularly in those with poor glycemic control. Diabetic nephropathy progresses from microalbuminuria to overt proteinuria and eventual decline in glomerular filtration rate, culminating in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) requiring dialysis or transplantation in approximately 5-10% of patients over their lifetime. Risk factors include hypertension and genetic predisposition, but early screening and renin-angiotensin system blockade can slow progression. Neuropathy encompasses distal symmetric , causing in up to 30% of patients, which predisposes to unperceived injuries, and , affecting 20-40% and leading to issues like , , and cardiovascular instability. Prevalence increases with diabetes duration and glycemic variability. Macrovascular complications are driven by accelerated , conferring a 2-4 times higher risk of and compared to the general population. Individuals with type 1 diabetes also face elevated rates of , contributing to foot complications. The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) and its follow-up Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (EDIC) study established that intensive insulin therapy reduces the of , nephropathy, and neuropathy by 50-76% compared to conventional treatment, with benefits persisting for decades due to metabolic memory. Foot ulcers, often resulting from neuropathy and poor , affect 15-25% of patients with type 1 diabetes over their lifetime, carrying a 15-fold increased of lower-extremity relative to non-diabetic individuals. Multidisciplinary care, including offloading and vascular assessment, is essential for prevention. Emerging adjunctive therapies, such as sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, show promise in 2025 data for improving glycemic control, reducing weight, and offering renal protective effects in type 1 diabetes despite contraindications due to risk; clinical trials indicate modest benefits in complication risk reduction when used cautiously.

Associated conditions

Type 1 diabetes is frequently associated with other autoimmune disorders due to shared immunological mechanisms. Autoimmune thyroiditis, particularly , affects 20-30% of individuals with type 1 diabetes, leading to in many cases. Celiac disease co-occurs in 5-10% of patients, often presenting asymptomatically but requiring management to prevent nutritional deficiencies. , or primary , is rarer, with a of approximately 1% in this population, though the risk is over 10 times higher than in the general population. These conditions share genetic risk factors, such as HLA alleles, contributing to their clustering in autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes. Infections are more common due to glucosuria promoting microbial growth. Urinary tract infections occur at higher rates in people with type 1 diabetes, particularly when glycemic control is poor, as glucose in the urine facilitates bacterial proliferation. , including vulvovaginal and urinary forms, is also elevated, with Candida species thriving in hyperglycemic environments. Neuropathy and vascular changes contribute to . In men, affects up to 50% of those with long-standing type 1 diabetes, resulting from impaired penile blood flow and nerve damage. Women experience reduced and , linked to affecting genital vascular and sensory responses. Autonomic neuropathy can lead to gastroparesis, delaying gastric emptying and causing nausea, bloating, and erratic glucose absorption; the 10-year cumulative incidence is about 5% in type 1 diabetes. Depression prevalence is roughly twice that of the general population, impacting adherence to diabetes management and quality of life. Screening is essential for early detection. Guidelines recommend measuring thyroid antibodies and function at diagnosis and annually thereafter, with celiac serology (IgA tissue transglutaminase) at diagnosis and every 1-2 years or if symptoms arise. In youth, undiagnosed celiac disease can exacerbate growth delays and pubertal issues beyond those from diabetes alone.

Prevention

Primary prevention strategies

Primary prevention strategies for type 1 diabetes aim to reduce the risk of developing islet in genetically susceptible individuals, particularly infants and young children in at-risk families, through modifiable environmental and lifestyle factors. These approaches focus on early-life interventions that support and gut health without targeting established . Key strategies include promoting and delaying the introduction of cow's milk proteins, as observational studies have associated prolonged exclusive with a reduced risk of type 1 diabetes, potentially by modulating early immune responses to dietary antigens. Similarly, delaying cow's milk exposure beyond 6 months may lower the incidence of islet , based on from cohort studies linking early cow's milk formula to insulin autoantibody development in genetically at-risk infants. Although large trials like the Trial to Reduce IDDM in the Genetically at Risk (TRIGR) did not show definitive prevention with hydrolyzed formulas, these findings support general recommendations for extended in high-risk populations. Evidence on vitamin D supplementation and type 1 diabetes risk is mixed, with some older studies suggesting a potential benefit but recent meta-analyses showing no significant reduction in incidence. This potential benefit may stem from vitamin D's role in regulating immune function and beta-cell protection, particularly when addressing early-life deficiencies through doses of 400 IU/day or higher. Maintaining a healthy gut via represents another promising avenue, as in early infancy has been associated with increased islet autoimmunity risk, and probiotic interventions in animal models and small human studies have shown potential to restore microbial balance and delay appearance. For instance, supplementation with strains like Bifidobacterium infantis may promote short-chain fatty acid production, which supports regulatory T-cell function and . The hygiene hypothesis posits that reduced exposure to diverse microbial infections in early childhood contributes to the rising incidence of type 1 diabetes by impairing immune system maturation, suggesting that balanced early-life infections could foster protective immunity. Evidence on early antibiotic use and type 1 diabetes risk is inconsistent, with some studies associating multiple courses with increased risk but recent research showing no clear link; minimizing unnecessary use remains advisable for general health. Family screening for autoantibodies in first-degree relatives is a critical early step, as these individuals face a 5-6% lifetime risk of developing type 1 diabetes—15 times higher than the general population—and detection of multiple autoantibodies elevates the 5-year progression risk to approximately 50% in younger relatives, enabling timely monitoring. These broad strategies complement more targeted interventions for those identified as high-risk through screening.

Disease-modifying interventions

Disease-modifying interventions aim to slow or halt the autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells in individuals at high risk for type 1 diabetes, particularly those in presymptomatic stages identified by autoantibody positivity. These therapies target the underlying immune dysregulation to delay the onset of clinical hyperglycemia (stage 3 disease), focusing on stage 2 patients who exhibit multiple autoantibodies and dysglycemia but remain normoglycemic. Screening programs like TrialNet have been instrumental in identifying at-risk individuals, revealing that approximately 5% of first-degree relatives of people with type 1 diabetes test positive for at least one diabetes-related autoantibody. Teplizumab (Tzield), a humanized anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody, represents the first approved disease-modifying therapy for delaying type 1 diabetes progression. Administered as a 14-day intravenous infusion, it modulates T-cell responses to preserve beta-cell function in stage 2 patients aged 8 years and older. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved teplizumab in November 2022 based on the pivotal TN-10 trial, which demonstrated a median time to onset of stage 3 disease of approximately 60 months compared to 27 months in placebo, a delay of about 33 months (2.75 years) among 76 high-risk participants. Subsequent analyses from longer-term follow-up indicate a 40-60% reduction in the risk of progression to clinical diabetes over 3-4 years. Over a median follow-up of 51 months, 43% of treated individuals progressed to stage 3 compared to 72% in the placebo group. As of November 2025, teplizumab received a positive opinion from the EMA for EU approval. Additionally, the FDA accepted a supplemental application in October 2025 for its use following stage 3 diagnosis. Other immunotherapies remain investigational but show promise in presymptomatic or early-stage settings. Otelixizumab, another anti-CD3 , has been evaluated in multiple trials for its potential to induce and delay beta-cell loss, though phase III studies like DEFEND-1 did not meet primary endpoints for preservation at low doses (3.1 mg total); ongoing dose-finding efforts continue to explore its efficacy in recent-onset and at-risk cohorts. Similarly, the GAD-alum targets decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), a key autoantigen, to promote regulatory T-cell responses and beta-cell preservation; phase II trials in recent-onset patients demonstrated sustained levels and improved insulin secretion for up to 4 years post-treatment, supporting its evaluation in presymptomatic high-risk groups. Antigen-specific approaches, such as oral insulin, have been tested in high-risk children through trials like Pre-POINT, which administered high-dose (67.5 mg daily) oral insulin to genetically susceptible individuals without autoantibodies. The pilot study induced immune modulation, including increased insulin-specific regulatory responses, and a follow-up trial showed slowed metabolic decline over 1 year, suggesting potential to delay onset in those with high HLA-risk genotypes. Emerging modulation therapies, including infusions to regulate autoimmune , are investigational and primarily in early-phase trials for presymptomatic prevention, with preclinical data indicating reduced T-cell aggression against beta cells but no established clinical delay in progression yet. Post-intervention monitoring is essential to assess efficacy and guide further , typically involving serial measurements of autoantibodies, oral glucose tolerance tests, and stimulated levels every 6-12 months to track beta-cell function and progression risk. Genetic screening can briefly inform eligibility for these interventions by identifying high-risk HLA haplotypes in autoantibody-positive individuals.

Epidemiology

Incidence and prevalence

Type 1 diabetes affects approximately 9.5 million people worldwide as of 2025. The global incidence is estimated at around 513,000 new cases annually. Incidence rates vary significantly by region, with the highest reported in at about 60 cases per 100,000 population per year, while the lowest rates occur in parts of , such as approximately 0.8 per 100,000 in . Type 1 diabetes accounts for 5-10% of all diagnosed cases globally. Approximately 43% of new cases are diagnosed before age 20, though onset can occur at any age. Incidence is slightly higher in males overall, with a peak during occurring earlier in females. Rates are higher among Caucasian populations compared to other ethnic groups. Projections indicate that the global prevalence will rise to approximately 14.7 million cases by 2040, driven by a 3-4% annual increase in incidence. This upward trend underscores the growing burden of the disease worldwide. The incidence of type 1 diabetes has increased globally by 2-5% annually since the 1980s, a trend observed across multiple large-scale epidemiological studies. This rise reflects complex genetic-environmental interactions that continue to influence disease onset. Recent analyses indicate that while high-income countries have seen steady but slowing increases, the acceleration is more pronounced in low- and middle-income countries, where improved diagnostics and changing lifestyles contribute to higher reported cases. Urbanization and rising obesity rates present paradoxes in type 1 diabetes trends, as the condition has traditionally been associated with lean body types, yet environmental shifts in urban settings—such as altered diets and reduced physical activity—correlate with increasing among affected individuals, potentially exacerbating . In 2025, an estimated 9.5 million people worldwide live with type 1 diabetes, including 1.85 million children and adolescents under age 20, with projections indicating a rise to approximately 14.7 million total cases by 2040, driven largely by adult-onset diagnoses. Some studies suggest that severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 () infection may act as a potential trigger for type 1 diabetes in susceptible individuals, with post-infection incidence rates showing increases of up to 28% in pediatric populations during peak pandemic periods. Migration also plays a role in regional shifts, as second-generation immigrants often exhibit elevated risk compared to their parents' generation, likely due to adoption of host-country environmental factors. Socioeconomic disparities profoundly affect outcomes, with survival rates in high-income countries approaching those of the general when access to insulin and care is ensured, whereas low correlates with higher mortality in resource-limited settings due to barriers in treatment availability.

Special populations

Pediatric cases

Type 1 diabetes most commonly presents in children between the ages of 4 and 7 years and again between 10 and 14 years, reflecting bimodal peaks in incidence during and . At , 30 to 40 percent of children experience (DKA), a serious acute complication characterized by , , and , which can lead to hospitalization and requires prompt insulin therapy and fluid resuscitation. If the condition remains undiagnosed, children may exhibit growth faltering, including weight loss, delayed height gain, and due to chronic and nutrient . During , children with type 1 often develop significant driven by growth hormones and sex steroids, which can necessitate doubling or more of their daily insulin doses to maintain glycemic control. Routine screening for associated autoimmune conditions, such as celiac disease and autoimmune , is essential in pediatric patients, as these comorbidities occur at higher rates—up to 10 percent for celiac disease and 20 to 30 percent for autoimmunity—and can impact growth, , and metabolic stability if undetected. As of 2025, continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) adoption in with type 1 has been linked to an average HbA1c reduction of 0.4 percent, particularly when initiated early after . With consistent multidisciplinary care, the vast majority of children diagnosed with type 1 reach adulthood, though lifelong monitoring is required to mitigate risks of complications. Psychologically, the condition contributes to challenges such as increased absenteeism—averaging nine additional days per year compared to peers without —often due to illness episodes, visits, or fatigue from glycemic fluctuations. Additionally, fear of is prevalent among children and their families, leading to anxiety, over-cautious behaviors, and potential disruptions in daily activities like participation or sleep.

Adult-onset variants

Adult-onset variants of type 1 diabetes encompass forms that emerge after age 30, often presenting with insidious symptoms that lead to frequent misdiagnosis as type 2 diabetes. These variants share an autoimmune pathogenesis with classic juvenile-onset type 1 diabetes but typically exhibit slower beta-cell destruction. Approximately 37% of type 1 diabetes cases are diagnosed after age 30, representing a substantial portion of new diagnoses in adulthood. The most common adult-onset variant is (LADA), which accounts for 5-10% of cases initially classified as . LADA is characterized by the presence of islet autoantibodies, such as decarboxylase antibodies (GADA), confirming its autoimmune , yet patients often do not require insulin immediately upon . Unlike classic type 1 diabetes, LADA features a prolonged honeymoon phase where residual beta-cell function persists for months to years, allowing initial management with oral agents. This slower progression results in a median time to insulin dependence typically ranging from 1 to 5 years, with many patients requiring insulin within 1-3 years according to recent analyses. Misdiagnosis of as is common due to overlapping clinical features like non-ketotic presentation and older age at onset, leading to delayed insulin initiation and poorer glycemic control. Patients with LADA also exhibit higher rates of comorbidities, including and , compared to those with classic type 1 diabetes, increasing cardiovascular risk. Idiopathic adult-onset type 1 diabetes, lacking detectable autoantibodies, is rare and may be triggered by environmental factors such as post-viral infections or drug exposures in susceptible individuals. For instance, certain viral infections like enteroviruses have been implicated in accelerating beta-cell destruction in genetically predisposed adults. Drug-induced cases, though uncommon, have been reported with agents causing reactions that precipitate acute beta-cell failure.

History

Early descriptions

The earliest known descriptions of a condition resembling diabetes appear in ancient Egyptian medical texts, such as the dating to approximately 1500 BCE, which characterized the ailment as involving "too great emptying of urine," indicative of excessive urination without specifying its sweetness or other metabolic features. This observation highlighted as a primary symptom but lacked insight into underlying causes or distinctions between disease variants. In the 2nd century CE, the Greek physician provided the first detailed clinical account of , coining the term "" from the Greek word for "" to describe the relentless flow of fluid through the body, as patients experienced unquenchable , voracious , rapid , and urine that flowed "like a river". noted the disease's progressive and often fatal nature, particularly affecting the kidneys and leading to in extremities, though he did not differentiate between what would later be identified as type 1 and type 2 forms. By the 17th century, English physician advanced understanding in 1674 by tasting the urine of affected individuals and observing its "wonderfully sweet" quality, akin to or sugar, which distinguished diabetes mellitus (from the Latin for "honey-sweet") from other polyuric conditions like . This sensory test, rediscovered from ancient Indian observations, marked a key step in recognizing the urinary glucose excretion central to the disease. In the early , European clinicians began differentiating based on clinical presentation and urine analysis, with chemical tests developed to detect and quantify sugar levels, enabling more precise . By the 1880s, the juvenile form—now known as type 1 —was recognized as a distinct entity characterized by abrupt onset in children and young adults, often leading to and , separate from the more gradual adult-onset variety. Prior to insulin's discovery, this juvenile type carried extremely high mortality, with approximately 50% of affected children dying within two years of due to complications like and . These early insights laid the groundwork for later physiological investigations into the pancreas's role.

Key discoveries

A major advance came in 1889 when German physiologists Joseph von Mering and Oskar Minkowski demonstrated that surgical removal of the in dogs led to the development of severe , providing the first experimental evidence of the pancreas's essential role in regulating blood glucose and preventing the condition. This finding spurred further research into pancreatic function and internal secretions. In the summer of 1921, Canadian physician and medical student Charles Best conducted experiments at the , successfully extracting insulin from the pancreases of dogs by ligating the pancreatic ducts to inhibit production, which allowed isolation of the hormone from the islets of Langerhans. This breakthrough followed Banting's idea to use this method to obtain an active pancreatic extract capable of lowering blood sugar in diabetic dogs. The first human application occurred on January 11, 1922, when 14-year-old Leonard Thompson, a patient with severe type 1 diabetes at , received a subcutaneous injection of the crude extract prepared by and Best; although the initial dose caused a local due to impurities, a second purified version administered days later dramatically reduced his blood glucose and ketones, marking the first successful insulin treatment and averting his imminent death. James Bertram Collip, a recruited to the team, refined the extraction process using alcohol precipitation to produce a safer, more potent form suitable for clinical use, enabling broader trials that confirmed insulin's life-saving efficacy. For their contributions, and professor John James Rickard , who provided laboratory resources, were awarded the 1923 in Physiology or Medicine; shared his portion with Best, while shared his with Collip, acknowledging the collaborative nature of the work. In the 1980s, advancements in led to the production of recombinant human insulin, first synthesized in 1978 by scientists using recombinant DNA technology in Escherichia coli bacteria, and approved by the FDA in 1982 as Humulin, offering a purer alternative to animal-derived insulin and reducing risks of allergic reactions. By the 1970s, research established the autoimmune basis of type 1 diabetes through the detection of autoantibodies targeting pancreatic beta cells, with islet cell antibodies (ICAs) first identified in 1974 in patients' sera, providing evidence of immune-mediated destruction of insulin-producing cells. Concurrently, genetic studies linked type 1 diabetes susceptibility to (HLA) genes on , with early reports in the 1970s associating HLA alleles with increased risk, and specific associations to HLA-DR3 and alleles established in the late 1970s, highlighting the role of variations in autoimmune predisposition. Reflecting in 2025, a century after its isolation, insulin has saved millions of lives by transforming from a fatal condition to a manageable one, though a definitive cure remains elusive amid ongoing efforts in and beta-cell regeneration.

Society and culture

Public health impact

With an estimated 9.5 million people living with globally as of 2025, the condition imposes a significant economic burden on healthcare systems, estimated at $84.4 billion worldwide using a cost-of-illness approach. In the United States, where accounts for about 5% of all cases, it consumes roughly 10% of total diabetes-related expenditures, estimated at around $30 billion annually in combined direct medical and as of 2018, amid rising overall costs to $412.9 billion in 2022. These figures highlight the disproportionate per-patient costs compared to , largely due to intensive treatment requirements from diagnosis onward, including significant lost productivity from , reduced work capacity, and premature mortality. Access disparities exacerbate this burden in low-income countries, where insulin remains unaffordable for approximately two-thirds of households, leading to , higher complication rates, and increased mortality. initiatives, such as widespread vaccination programs, have shown promise in mitigating potential environmental triggers for type 1 diabetes onset, with fully vaccinated children experiencing up to a one-third lower risk of developing the condition. To address these challenges, the has established global targets for 2030, aiming for 100% access to affordable, quality-assured insulin for all individuals with who require it, alongside broader goals for , glycemic control, and prevention of complications. These policy efforts seek to reduce economic strain on healthcare systems and improve equity, particularly in resource-limited settings.

Patient experiences

Patients with type 1 diabetes often face significant daily challenges in managing their condition, including the persistent fear of , which can lead to anxiety and altered behaviors such as to avoid low blood sugar episodes. This fear is particularly acute during activities like exercise or sleep, where symptoms may go unnoticed, prompting individuals to maintain higher glucose levels at the cost of long-term health. Travel poses additional hurdles, as insulin must be kept at stable temperatures between 36°F and 86°F, requiring insulated cooling packs or specialized bags to prevent degradation during flights or exposure to . Discrimination remains a barrier in educational and professional settings, where students may encounter reluctance from schools to accommodate glucose monitoring or insulin administration, while employees face biases in hiring or promotions due to misconceptions about reliability during hypoglycemic events. Stigma affects a substantial portion of the type 1 diabetes community, with a 2024 global survey indicating that 40% of people with diabetes, including those with type 1, feel their condition is not taken seriously by others. This perception often manifests as judgmental comments, such as questioning food choices, which 76% of respondents have experienced, exacerbating feelings of isolation and shame. Online communities, notably the Diabetes Online Community (#DOC), play a crucial role in countering this by providing peer support, shared strategies, and a sense of belonging that fosters emotional resilience. Celebrity advocates like Nick Jonas, diagnosed at age 13, have amplified awareness through public disclosures and partnerships, such as with Dexcom for continuous glucose monitoring, helping to normalize the condition and challenge stereotypes. Mental health burdens are prominent, with approximately 30% of individuals with type 1 diabetes experiencing depression linked to the constant demands of disease management. Diabetes burnout, characterized by disengagement from self-care routines, affects up to 79% in some global assessments, contributing to heightened stress and poorer glycemic control. Support groups, both in-person and virtual, effectively mitigate these issues by reducing isolation; participants report lower levels of emotional distress and improved coping through shared experiences and practical advice. These networks emphasize that type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition unrelated to lifestyle, countering stigma and promoting mental well-being. Cultural depictions in media, such as those involving advocates like Jonas, occasionally highlight these struggles but often focus more on management triumphs.

Research

Immunotherapy developments

for type 1 diabetes aims to modulate the autoimmune response that destroys insulin-producing beta cells, with recent advances focusing on agents that preserve residual beta-cell function in early-stage disease. , an anti-CD3 , blocks T-cell activation by binding to the CD3 epsilon chain on T lymphocytes, thereby inducing partial T-cell exhaustion and promoting regulatory T-cell expansion to halt progression. In the TN-10 trial, a phase 2 study completed in 2019, a single 14-day course of delayed the median time to onset of stage 3 type 1 diabetes to 48 months (vs. 24 months with ) in high-risk relatives aged 8-45 years, with 57% of treated participants remaining diabetes-free at 4 years versus 28% in the control group. An extension of the TN-10 study presented in 2025 demonstrated sustained benefits post-stage 3 diagnosis, including improved levels in new-onset patients, confirming 's role in extending beta-cell preservation. Phase 3 trials initiated in 2025, such as a platform study comparing to , continue to evaluate its efficacy in delaying progression from stage 2 to stage 3 disease, building on FDA approval in for at-risk individuals aged 8 and older. In November 2025, the European Medicines Agency's CHMP recommended approval of for delaying progression from stage 2 to stage 3 type 1 diabetes in at-risk individuals aged 8 and older. Other immunomodulatory agents target distinct immune pathways. Rituximab, a B-cell depleting antibody, was tested in phase 2 trials like the TN-05 study, where it preserved stimulated C-peptide levels for up to 12 months in new-onset patients aged 8-45 years by reducing autoantibody production and antigen presentation. Abatacept, which inhibits T-cell costimulation via CTLA-4 binding to CD80/86, showed in a phase 2 trial (TN-08) that weekly infusions for 24 months in patients aged 6-45 years with recent-onset disease sustained C-peptide responses better than placebo, with slower beta-cell decline. Low-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) promotes regulatory T-cell proliferation without overstimulating effector T cells; a phase 1/2 trial in children with new-onset type 1 diabetes demonstrated that doses of 0.1 to 1.5 million IU/day for 5 days preserved beta-cell function, as measured by C-peptide, over 12 months with favorable safety. A 2025 network of 60 randomized trials involving 4,597 participants with stage 3 type 1 diabetes found that immunotherapies like , rituximab, and preserved stimulated in 20-50% of patients at 12 months post-treatment, compared to 10-20% in groups, highlighting their potential to extend honeymoon phase duration. Common side effects across these trials included transient rash, lymphopenia, and increased infection risk, but these were generally manageable with monitoring and did not lead to long-term complications. The TN-10 trial in new-onset extensions further supported these findings, with sustained beta-cell preservation observed. Emerging personalized approaches leverage biomarkers such as baseline levels, profiles, and T-cell subsets to select optimal therapies, improving response rates in heterogeneous patient populations. For instance, higher baseline correlates with better preservation outcomes in teplizumab responders, guiding stratified trial designs. These strategies may eventually combine immune modulation with regenerative therapies to achieve durable remission.

Regenerative approaches

Regenerative approaches in type 1 diabetes aim to restore functional mass through differentiation, , and endogenous regeneration strategies, offering potential cures by replenishing insulin-producing cells lost to . (iPSC)-derived s represent a major advance, enabling scalable production of insulin-secreting cells from patient or donor sources. In a phase 1–2 of zimislecel (VX-880), an allogeneic iPSC-derived , 12 participants with type 1 diabetes demonstrated endogenous insulin production, with all showing a mean 92% reduction in exogenous insulin use and 83% achieving insulin independence at 12 months post-infusion. To mitigate immune rejection of transplanted beta cells, encapsulation devices have been developed to shield grafts while permitting and insulin exchange. For instance, macroencapsulation systems like ViaCyte's Encaptra promote vascularization and allow cell retrieval if needed. Complementing this, CRISPR-based gene editing creates hypoimmunogenic cells by knocking out molecules and overexpressing immune checkpoints, reducing the need for lifelong in preclinical models. The first allogeneic transplant of stem cell-derived islets occurred in 2024, marking a milestone in off-the-shelf therapies for type 1 diabetes. In animal models, such as diabetic mice, iPSC-derived grafts have achieved normoglycemia for extended periods, restoring glucose without exogenous insulin. However, key challenges persist, including inadequate vascularization leading to post-transplant hypoxia and limited scalability in manufacturing sufficient cell quantities for widespread use. In 2025, the FDA granted fast-track and Advanced Therapy designations to several such therapies, including VX-880, to accelerate development. Islet neogenesis from endogenous progenitors offers an alternative by stimulating pancreatic ductal cells to differentiate into new beta cells, potentially avoiding transplantation altogether. Preclinical studies using inhibitors have induced beta-like cell regeneration from ductal progenitors in diabetic models, enhancing insulin secretion and glycemic control. These regenerative strategies may integrate with immunotherapies to protect newly formed cells from autoimmune attack.

Device innovations

Fully closed-loop artificial pancreas systems represent a major advancement in automated glucose management for type 1 diabetes, integrating continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) with insulin pumps and sophisticated control algorithms to automatically adjust insulin delivery without constant user input. In 2025, systems like Insulet's Omnipod 5 and Medtronic's MiniMed 780G have achieved median time in range (TIR) values of up to 80% in select clinical and real-world studies, particularly when users adhere to recommended glucose targets. These systems employ predictive algorithms, increasingly incorporating (AI) to forecast glucose trends over 60 minutes and deliver micro-boluses of insulin every 5 minutes, thereby minimizing and while serving as an adjunct to traditional insulin therapy. The iLet Bionic Pancreas from Beta Bionics introduces a dual-hormone approach, delivering both insulin and to more closely mimic physiological responses and better manage post-meal glucose excursions and risks. Approved initially for insulin-only use by the FDA in 2023, the system is designed for future dual-hormone capability, with ongoing developments in 2025 including integration with advanced sensors for glucagon delivery. This bionic design reduces the cognitive burden on users by automating dosing based on minimal inputs like body weight and meal announcements, leading to improved glycemic control in clinical trials. Non-invasive CGM technologies, such as those using optical sensors like photoplethysmography (PPG) or polarization-based methods, are in advanced clinical trials as of 2025, aiming to eliminate skin penetration for glucose monitoring. Proof-of-concept studies have demonstrated promising accuracy in estimating glucose levels from wrist-worn devices, potentially enhancing user comfort and adherence when integrated into closed-loop systems. Real-world adoption of in the has grown substantially by 2025, with large-scale data from over 70,000 Omnipod 5 users indicating widespread use among eligible individuals, though cost remains a barrier mitigated by expanded Medicare and subsidies. These systems have been shown to significantly reduce time spent in , with some studies reporting decreases of up to 40% compared to conventional therapy. Implantable insulin pumps offer enhanced precision by delivering insulin directly into the , reducing variability in absorption and site reactions associated with subcutaneous methods. In 2025, international trials, including those in the , are evaluating updated implantable devices with concentrated insulin formulations stable at body temperature, paving the way for longer-term, fully internalized closed-loop solutions.

References

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