Authors:
Kirstine J. Bell, Shannon Brodie, Jennifer J. Couper, Peter Colman, Elizabeth Davis, Gary Deed, William Hagopian, Aveni Haynes, Christel Hendrieckx, Amanda Henry, Adrienne Gordon, Kirsten Howard, Tony Huynh, Bernadette Kerr, Kara Mikler, Natasha Nassar, Sarah Norris, Richard Oram, Dorota Pawlak, Antonia Shand, Richard O. Sinnott, Bethany Wadling, John M. Wentworth, Maria E. Craig & the Type 1 Diabetes National Screening Pilot Study Group
University of Washington affiliated authors are displayed in bold.
✪ Open Access
Published: August 2024
Read the full text in the open access journal Diabetes Medicine
Abstract:
Aim
One third of Australian children diagnosed with type 1 diabetes present with life-threatening diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) at diagnosis. Screening for early-stage, presymptomatic type 1 diabetes, with ongoing follow-up, can substantially reduce this risk (<5% risk). Several screening models are being trialled internationally, without consensus on the optimal approach. This pilot study aims to assess three models for a routine, population-wide screening programme in Australia.
Methods
An implementation science-guided pilot study to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability and costs of three screening models in children will be conducted between July 2022 and June 2024. These models are as follows: (1) Genetic risk-stratified screening using newborn heel prick dried bloodspots, followed by autoantibody testing from 11 months of age; (2) genetic risk-stratified screening of infant (6–12 months) saliva followed by autoantibody testing from 10 months of age; and (3) autoantibody screening using capillary dried bloodspots collected from children aged 2, 6 or 10 years. Cohorts for each model will be recruited from targeted geographic areas across Australia involving ≥2 states per cohort, with a recruitment target of up to 3000 children per cohort (total up to 9000 children). The primary outcome is screening uptake for each cohort. Secondary outcomes include programme feasibility, costs, parental anxiety, risk perception, satisfaction, well-being and quality of life, and health professional attitudes and satisfaction.
Conclusions
This pilot is the first direct comparison of three screening implementation models for general population screening. Findings will provide evidence to inform a potential national screening programme for Australian children.
**This abstract is posted with permission under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License**