Study concludes there's no
link between childhood vaccinations and diabetes
April 1, 2004
(AP) - Researchers determined there is no link between childhood vaccines
and the development of diabetes, the latest study to find no such
connection.
Using birth and medical registries, Danish researchers checked vaccination
records and cases of Type 1 diabetes for the more than 739,000 children born
between 1990 and 2000 in Denmark.
They found no more cases of Type 1 diabetes among vaccinated children
compared with unvaccinated children. There also was no increase seen in
children with a sibling with diabetes, who are at higher risk of developing
the disorder, the researchers reported in Thursday's New England Journal of
Medicine.
Type 1 diabetes is increasing in developed countries, where childhood
immunization is widespread. That is one of the main reasons some have
proposed a link.
"This study will, one hopes, be the last one that is necessary to disprove
an association between immunizations and diabetes," Dr. Lynne L. Levitsky of
Harvard Medical School said in a commentary in the journal.
Type 1 diabetes, also known as juvenile diabetes or insulin-dependent
diabetes, mostly afflicts young children. Because their pancreas produces
little or no insulin, they need to take insulin daily. There is no known
cause, but genetic and environmental factors may play a role.
The Danish children were vaccinated against eight diseases on a schedule
similar to that in the United States, said Dr. Mads Melbye, one of the
researchers at the Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen.
"This really re-emphasizes that vaccines are generally very safe and they
are extremely important," Melbye said.