4.7 Review

Twenty years of pediatric diabetes surveillance: what do we know and why it matters

Journal

ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Volume 1495, Issue 1, Pages 99-120

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nyas.14573

Keywords

type 1 diabetes; type 2 diabetes; youth; surveillance; epidemiology; health disparities

Funding

  1. CDC [00097, DP-05-069, DP-10-001, 1U18DP006131, U18DP006133, U18DP006134, U18DP006136, U18DP006138, U18DP006139]
  2. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
  3. National Institutes of Health [1UC4DK108173]
  4. CDC
  5. NIH
  6. Kaiser Permanente Southern California [U18DP006133, U48/CCU919219, U01 DP000246, U18DP002714]
  7. University of Colorado Denver [U18DP006139, U48/CCU819241-3, U01 DP000247, U18DP000247-06A1]
  8. Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center [U18DP006134, U48/CCU519239, U01 DP000248, 1U18DP002709]
  9. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [U18DP006138, U48/CCU419249, U01 DP000254, U18DP002708]
  10. Seattle Children's Hospital [U18DP006136, U58/CCU019235-4, U01 DP000244, U18DP002710-01]
  11. Wake Forest University School of Medicine [U48/CCU919219, U18DP006131, U01 DP000250, 200-2010-35171]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

SEARCH study, initiated in 2000, aims to address gaps in understanding childhood diabetes in the US by monitoring incidence, trends, and complications through a multicenter approach. Continued surveillance and follow-up are essential for understanding the natural history of diabetes and developing effective prevention and treatment strategies.
SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth (SEARCH) was initiated in 2000 as a multicenter study to address major gaps in the understanding of childhood diabetes in the United States. An active registry of youth diagnosed with diabetes at age <20 years since 2002 assessed prevalence, annual incidence, and trends by age, race/ethnicity, sex, and diabetes type. An observational cohort nested within the population-based registry was established to assess the natural history and risk factors for acute and chronic diabetes-related complications, as well as the quality of care and quality of life of children and adolescents with diabetes from diagnosis into young adulthood. SEARCH findings have contributed to a better understanding of the complex and heterogeneous nature of youth-onset diabetes. Continued surveillance of the burden and risk of type 1 and type 2 diabetes is important to track and monitor incidence and prevalence within the population. SEARCH reported evidence of early diabetes complications highlighting that continuing the long-term follow-up of youth with diabetes is necessary to further our understanding of its natural history and to develop the most appropriate approaches to primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention of diabetes and its complications. This review summarizes two decades of research and suggests avenues for further work.

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