Early Dietary Intervention and Later Signs of Beta-Cell Autoimmunity (EDIA)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 focused on measuring infant formula, diet, diabetes mellitus, type 1, autoimmunity
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- The infant's parents give signed consent to participate and their HLA genotype is eligible.
Exclusion Criteria:
- An older sibling of the newborn infant has been included in this study;
- Multiple gestation;
- The parents are unwilling or unable to feed the infant cow's milk based products for any reason (e.g., religious, cultural);
- The gestational age of the newborn infant is less than 35 weeks
- Inability of the family to take part in the study (e.g. the family had no access to the Study Center or telephone)
- The newborn infant has a recognizable severe illness such as those due to chromosomal abnormality, congenital malformation, respiratory failure needing assisted ventilation, enzyme deficiencies, etc.;
- The infant receives any infant formula other than study formula or Nutramigen at the delivery hospital
- No HLA sample has been drawn before the age of 8 days.
Sites / Locations
- Tampere University Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
extensively hydrolyzed casein formula
cow's milk based infant formula
The investigators plan to randomize 60 out of 120 infants to be weaned to an extensively hydrolyzed casein formula. Recruited mothers are encouraged to breast-feed. The dietary intervention will be applied until 9 months of age. The minimum exposure time to the study formula should be 90 days. Signs of beta-cell autoimmunity, i.e. diabetes-associated autoantibodies, will be monitored in the study participants, although the study will not have sufficient power to detect statistically significant differences in the seroconversion rate between the groups due to the limited number of infants randomized.
The investigators plan to randomize 60 out of 120 infants to be weaned to a cow's milk based infant formula. Recruited mothers are encouraged to breast-feed. The dietary intervention will be applied until 9 months of age. The minimum exposure time to the study formula should be 90 days. Signs of beta-cell autoimmunity, i.e. diabetes-associated autoantibodies, will be monitored in the study participants, although the study will not have sufficient power to detect statistically significant differences in the seroconversion rate between the groups due to the limited number of infants randomized.