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CARLA GIORDANO

Hydrolyzed infant formula and early β-cell autoimmunity: a randomized clinical trial.

  • Authors: Knip M; Ã…kerblom HK; Becker D; Dosch HM; Dupre J; Fraser W; Howard N; Ilonen J, Krischer JP; Kordonouri O; Lawson ML; Palmer JP; Savilahti E; Vaarala O; Virtanen SM; TRIGR Study Group; Giordano, C.
  • Publication year: 2014
  • Type: Articolo in rivista (Articolo in rivista)
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/227634

Abstract

Importance The disease process leading to clinical type 1 diabetes often starts during the first years of life. Early exposure to complex dietary proteins may increase the risk of β-cell autoimmunity in children at genetic risk for type 1 diabetes. Extensively hydrolyzed formulas do not contain intact proteins. Objective To test the hypothesis that weaning to an extensively hydrolyzed formula decreases the cumulative incidence of diabetes-associated autoantibodies in young children. Design, Setting, and Participants A double-blind randomized clinical trial of 2159 infants with HLA-conferred disease susceptibility and a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes recruited from May 2002 to January 2007 in 78 study centers in 15 countries; 1078 were randomized to be weaned to the extensively hydrolyzed casein formula and 1081 were randomized to be weaned to a conventional cows’ milk–based formula. The participants were observed to April 16, 2013. Interventions The participants received either a casein hydrolysate or a conventional cows’ milk formula supplemented with 20% of the casein hydrolysate. Main Outcomes and Measures Primary outcome was positivity for at least 2 diabetes-associated autoantibodies out of 4 analyzed. Autoantibodies to insulin, glutamic acid decarboxylase, and the insulinoma-associated–2 (IA-2) molecule were analyzed using radiobinding assays and islet cell antibodies with immunofluorescence during a median observation period of 7.0 years (mean, 6.3 years). Results The absolute risk of positivity for 2 or more islet autoantibodies was 13.4% among those randomized to the casein hydrolysate formula (n = 139) vs 11.4% among those randomized to the conventional formula (n = 117). The unadjusted hazard ratio for positivity for 2 or more autoantibodies among those randomized to be weaned to the casein hydrolysate was 1.21 (95% CI, 0.94-1.54), compared with those randomized to the conventional formula, while the hazard ratio adjusted for HLA risk, duration of breastfeeding, vitamin D use, study formula duration and consumption, and region was 1.23 (95% CI, 0.96-1.58). There were no clinically significant differences in the rate of reported adverse events between the 2 groups. Conclusions and Relevance Among infants at risk for type 1 diabetes, the use of a hydrolyzed formula, when compared with a conventional formula, did not reduce the incidence of diabetes-associated autoantibodies after 7 years. These findings do not support a benefit from hydrolyzed formula. Trial Registration clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00179777 Type 1 diabetes is characterized by selective loss of insulin-producing β cells in the pancreatic islets in genetically susceptible individuals. Overt clinical disease is preceded by an asymptomatic period of highly variable duration1 during which diabetes-associated autoantibodies appear in the peripheral circulation as markers of emerging β-cell autoimmunity. Several disease-related autoantibodies predict clinical type 1 diabetes including classical islet cell antibodies (ICA), insulin autoantibodies, autoantibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), and the tyrosine phosphatase-related insulinoma-associated 2 molecule (IA-2).2 In natural history studies from infancy, positivity for at least 2 autoantibodies signals a risk of approximately 60% for the development of clinical diabetes over 10 years, whereas the 10-year risk among those with a single autoantibody is about 15% and among those with no detectable autoantibodies less than 1%.3 Accumulating evidence suggests that β-cell autoimmunity emerges early in life.4,5 The incidence of type 1 diabetes is increasing among children in Europe and North America,6,7 although some studies suggest it may be stabilizing.8 This scenario implies that any measure aimed at primary prevention of type 1 diabetes, ie, prevention of the initiation of the diabetic disease proc