Summary:
Background. The aim of the study was to assess the incidence and prevalence of type 1 diabetes in Czech children
aged 0–15 years over the period 1989–2003.
Methods and Results. The cases were ascertained using two independent sources, the population-wide Czech
Childhood Diabetes Register and the Association of Parents and Friends of Diabetic Children, and the completeness
was calculated using the capture-recapture method. The background population size was obtained from annual reports
of the Czech Statistic Bureau. Trends in incidence were estimated using Poisson regression. A total of 3 454 cases
was ascertained, with an estimated deficit of 28 (95% CI 16–41) individuals. The average age-standardized incidence
was 12.0 (95% CI 11.6–12.4)/100 000/year, and its average relative increase was 6.8 %/year. The incidence has
risen from 6.8 (95% CI 5.7–7.9) in 1989 to 18.3 (95% CI 16.2–20.4) in 2003. The prevalence in 2003 was 1.01 (95%
CI 0.96–0.06) cases per 1000, and its projection into the coming decade expects a rise to approximately 1.7/1000 in
2013.
Conclusions. The present work shows that the Czech population has an intermediate childhood type 1 diabetes incidence
compared to other European countries, and although its continuous rise may be expected, the prevalence is very
unlikely to reach dramatically high figures.
Key words:
type 1 diabetes mellitus for children, epidemiology of diabetes mellitus for children.
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