Boys who start puberty earlier may have a higher risk of type 2 diabetes as adults

Boys who start puberty earlier may have a higher risk of type 2 diabetes as adults
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New European research has found that boys who start puberty earlier may be more likely to develop type 2 diabetes as adults.

Carried out by researchers at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Sweden, the new study looked at the health records of 30,697 men who had their body mass index (BMI) recorded in childhood at age eight and in young adulthood at age 20 as part of another study.

The timing of the boys' puberty had also been calculated during the study using age at peak height velocity (PHV), which is the time when boys grow the fastest during their adolescent growth spurt and which occurs around two years after entering puberty.

The findings, published in the journal Diabetologia, showed that the average age at puberty was 14.

The researchers also found that the boys who started puberty at an earlier age, between 9.3 to 13.4 years, which was the youngest group in the study, were around two times more likely to develop early type 2 diabetes in adulthood before the age of 57, than those in the oldest group who had their growth spurt between the age of 14.8 to 17.9 years.

The team also found that those in the youngest group had a 27 per cent higher risk of late type 2 diabetes, after age 57, although the risk was not as strong as for early type 2 diabetes.

The men who had gone through puberty earlier and who had developed type 2 diabetes were also more likely to require insulin treatment; for each year earlier that they went through puberty there was 25 per cent increased risk of developing insulin-dependent type 2 diabetes.

In addition, for each year earlier that boys had their pubertal growth spurt occurred, their risk of developing early diabetes increased by 28 per cent, while the risk of late diabetes increased by 13 per cent.

The increased risk was similar even after taking into account the boys' BMI at age eight.

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"Our findings suggest that early puberty could be a novel independent risk factor for type 2 diabetes in men," says researcher Associate Professor Jenny Kindblom. "Given the apparent higher risk among boys who start puberty before the average age of 14 years, we estimate that 15 per cent fewer men who were diagnosed during the study would have developed type 2 diabetes had they not started puberty early."

"Although the mechanisms for the link between early puberty and higher risk of type 2 diabetes are unclear, it is possible that starting puberty at an earlier age may lead to the accumulation of excess abdominal fat, which in turn increases cardiometabolic risk factors such as high blood pressure, diabetes, and abnormal lipid levels," added Prof Kindblom.

"These findings strengthen the concept that early puberty is part of an adverse trajectory during childhood and adolescence, and that a high BMI both before and after puberty contributes. A continuous monitoring of height and weight development during not only childhood but also adolescence is of importance and might help identify individuals with increased risk."

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