OBJECTIVE—The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of type 1 diabetes among children aged 0–14 years in the Avalon Peninsula in the Canadian Province of Newfoundland.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—This was a prospective cohort study of the incidence of childhood type 1 diabetes in children aged 0–14 years who were diagnosed with type 1 diabetes from 1987 to 2002 on the Avalon Peninsula. Identified case subjects during this time period were ascertained from several sources and verified using the capture-recapture technique. Data were obtained from the only pediatric diabetes treatment center for children living on the Avalon Peninsula.

RESULTS—Over the study period, 294 children aged 0–14 years from the Avalon Peninsula were diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. The incidence of type 1 diabetes in this population over the period 1987–2002 inclusive was 35.93 with a 95% CI of 31.82–40.03. The incidence over this period increased linearly at the rate of 1.25 per 100,000 individuals per year.

CONCLUSIONS—The Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland has one of the highest incidences of type 1 diabetes reported worldwide. The incidence increased over the 16-year study period.

Type 1 diabetes, the most common form of diabetes in childhood, is a T-cell-mediated autoimmune disease in which both genetic and environmental factors play roles in the etiology (1,2). The incidence of childhood type 1 diabetes is known to vary widely between and within countries. The incidence of type 1 diabetes (≤14 years) varies from 0.1/100,000 per year in China (1990–1994) and Venezuela (1992) to 36.8/100,000 per year in Sardinia (1990–1994) and 36.5/100,000 per year in Finland (1990–1994) (3). In most populations the incidence has been increasing (4). The incidence of type 1 diabetes in Canada is available from only a few studies, which were carried out over the past 25 years (3,57). Two Canadian provinces have also reported a high incidence of the disease. A 6-year study (1990–1995) reported a mean incidence of 25.7/100,000 in children <15 years of age who lived in the city of Edmonton (5). A 4-year study from the province of Prince Edward Island reported a mean incidence of 24.5/100,000 in children <15 years of age (1990–1993) (3). The reported mean incidence for Montreal (1971–1985) among children 0–14 years was 10.1/100,000 (6). The lowest reported incidence was from Toronto (1976–1978) with a mean incidence of 9.0/100,000 per year in children <19 years of age (7).

The study we are reporting was performed at the Janeway Child Health Care Centre (JCHCC), which is the only tertiary care children’s hospital servicing the Province of Newfoundland and Labrador. All children with type 1 diabetes who live on the Avalon Peninsula are referred to one of the diabetologists at the JCHCC and are followed from the time of diagnosis by the Janeway Pediatric Diabetes Team. The Avalon Peninsula was chosen for a study of the incidence of diabetes because it is well defined geographically and because all children from this area are followed at a single diabetes clinic. This enabled us to have confidence about the degree of ascertainment achieved. Also, 46% of the childhood population of Newfoundland lives on the Avalon Peninsula (8).

The Memorial University of Newfoundland and Health Care Corporation of St. John’s Ethics Committees approved this study.

Case ascertainment

From 1987 to 2002, all newly diagnosed children with type 1 diabetes were admitted to the Janeway Hospital and were subsequently followed at the Hospital Clinic. Subjects included in this study were ascertained from three sources. First, subjects were ascertained from the diabetes register for type 1 diabetes, which was kept at the Janeway Hospital by the diabetes nurse educator from 1987 onward. Next, research nurses carried out a search of the Hospital Medical Records Department using the diagnostic index code for insulin-dependent diabetes from 1987 to 2002. Subjects were also ascertained from the office records of pediatricians who cared for patients with diabetes. Using the previous three sources, a master list of all patients with type 1 diabetes was established. The research nurse reviewed all charts obtained from the various sources described. Using a data abstraction form, basic demographic details were reported, including a child’s name and sex, date of birth, date of diagnosis, and address at diagnosis. The geographical address of the child at the time of diagnosis was recorded and confirmed to be located on the Avalon Peninsula.

Finally, a registry for the Provincial Diabetes Camp was obtained from years 1987 to 2002 from the provincial diabetes camp director. All camp participants with addresses on the Avalon Peninsula were identified and matched to those from the master list compiled by the JCHCC research nurse. One hundred percent ascertainment was confirmed using the capture-recapture method.

Classification and case definition

The diagnosis of type 1 diabetes was confirmed based on current guidelines from the Canadian Diabetes Association classification of diabetes and diagnostic criteria (9). Patients included were those <15 years of age at the time of diagnosis. Patients excluded were those with type 2 diabetes, maturity-onset diabetes of youth, transient hyperglycemia, and diabetes caused by chemotherapy or cystic fibrosis. A small percentage of patients with diabetes diagnosed at <15 years of age have type 2 diabetes. Those patients are normally identified by the pediatric endocrinologist or diabetologist. Patients with suspected and confirmed type 2 diabetes were excluded. Although there are some First Nations patients followed at the JCHCC diabetes clinic from Labrador, there were none included in this study because they were not living on the Avalon Peninsula.

Incidence study population

The denominator for the analysis was children <15 years of age with residency in the study area that is defined geographically to correspond with census boundaries. The overall size of the population was obtained from census data (8), which are published by Statistics Canada, a department within the government of Canada. A national census performed every 5 years was undertaken in 1991, 1996, and 2001.

Statistical methods

The incidence was calculated as the number of newly diagnosed subjects per 100,000 individuals per year in the age-group 0–14 years and in 5-year age-groups (0–4, 5–9, and 10–14 years), and 95% CIs were calculated. Comparisons were made between boys and girls.

A total of 294 new cases of type 1 diabetes was identified among children ages 0–14 years during the study period. The overall incidence per 100,000 individuals per year over the period 1987–2002 was 35.93 (95% CI 31.82–40.03) for the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada. See Table 1 for the mean incidences for the various age-groups between boys and girls.

There was no significant difference between the incidence of 36.15 for boys and 35.69 for girls during this 16-year period with a P value of 0.752. The corresponding Z score was −0.316. The incidence per year for the age-group 0–14 years from 1998 to 2002 has remained >40/100,000 (Table 1). The linear regression model fits well for the data of the incidence of boys and girls on years with P < 0.01. The value of the correlation coefficient between the total incidence and years is 0.7. The estimated rate at which the incidence is increasing per year in this population over the period 1987–2002 using the linear additive regression model is 1.25. The incidence for the 0- to 4-year age-group was 24.95, 5- to 9-year age-group was 37.01, and 10- to 14-year age-group was 43.62 per 100,000 (1987–2002) (Fig. 1).

This current study represents an analysis on the population from the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland, confirming the high and increasing incidence over the 16-year study period. The incidence has an increasing trend in all age-groups for both boys and girls (Table 2).

Worldwide, there is a wide variation in the incidence among various populations. In addition, there is a general increase in the incidence of type 1 diabetes in many European (10) and Middle-Eastern countries (4), which is confirmed in our population.

The current Newfoundland population is composed mainly of descendants from approximately 20,000 English and Irish immigrants who settled there in the mid-1700s (11). The cod fishery spurred the settlement of Newfoundland, which occurred particularly in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Immigrants came from primarily two main areas, Southwest England and Southeast Ireland. By the mid-1830s, the major migrations had concluded, and the population of Newfoundland was approximately 75,000. After this, natural increase became the mechanism for population growth. Other factors, including geographic isolation, lack of roads, segregation by religion, and limited immigration kept related families together. In 1982, 50% of the population lived in communities <2,500 and 41% in communities of <1,000. The Newfoundland population can be considered to have relatively homogeneous origins as a result of how the population was settled and expanded (12). Founder effects have been identified in several other diseases in this population (13,14), and it is hypothesized that this may also be the case for type 1 diabetes, perhaps accounting for the high incidence in the Avalon Peninsula.

The incidence of type 1 diabetes in children aged <15 years on the Avalon Peninsula has been higher than in most areas of the world over the study duration. The incidence of type 1 diabetes has increased, especially over the last 5-year period. Environmental factors are suspected; however, these remain elusive. Although the etiology of type 1 diabetes is unknown, it is proposed that environmental factors may be at play in genetically susceptible individuals, triggering an immune response that leads to the destruction of the pancreatic β-cell. Environmental factors hypothesized in the etiology of type 1 diabetes have included viruses, toxins, stressful life events, and dietary factors (1520).

The early infant diet may be important. Breast-feeding for >3 months may be protective against type 1 diabetes (21). Breast-feeding has protective effects that reduce enteric infections early in life. Early introduction of cow’s milk protein into an infants diet may possibly be harmful (18). Newfoundland has low rates of breast-feeding as compared with the rest of Canada; however, the rate of breast-feeding initiation has increased gradually over the same study period from 39 (1992) to 55.5% (2001) (22).

In conclusion, the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland appears to have the highest incidence of childhood type 1 diabetes in North America, with recent incidence approaching those of Finland and Sardinia. The high incidence is likely due to a combination of genetic and environmental factors. We are currently collecting incidence data from all diabetes centers across the province in a prospective manner. Continued research to determine the reasons for such a high incidence is warranted, and further study into this unique population may contribute to a better understanding of the etiology and pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes.

Figure 1—

Incidence of type 1 diabetes per 100,000 individuals in the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada, from 1987 to 2002.

Figure 1—

Incidence of type 1 diabetes per 100,000 individuals in the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada, from 1987 to 2002.

Close modal
Table 1—

Incidence of type 1 diabetes (0–14 years) per 100,000 individuals in the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada, 1987–2002

YearSex0–14 years0–4 years5–9 years10–14 years
1987–2002 Boys and girls 35.93 24.95 37.01 43.62 
1987–2002 Boys 36.15 28.65 35.23 42.83 
1987–2002 Girls 35.69 21.13 38.85 44.46 
1987–1991 Boys and girls 31.30 22.96 23.83 45.23 
1992–1996 Boys and girls 32.68 23.29 40.74 32.80 
1997–2001 Boys and girls 43.45 31.21 48.40 48.21 
1987 Boys and girls 38.86 33.23 35.39 46.83 
1988 Boys and girls 27.44 28.15 05.14 47.39 
1989 Boys and girls 20.84 17.32 20.65 23.95 
1990 Boys and girls 28.22 17.55 15.68 48.82 
1991 Boys and girls 41.26 17.79 42.60 59.73 
1992 Boys and girls 27.20 36.14 16.17 30.01 
1993 Boys and girls 33.15 24.65 49.30 25.22 
1994 Boys and girls 35.97 19.23 34.09 50.96 
1995 Boys and girls 41.02 27.13 81.40 15.58 
1996 Boys and girls 26.15 07.09 23.89 42.42 
1997 Boys and girls 37.49 14.75 31.12 59.83 
1998 Boys and girls 45.16 60.87 25.91 50.21 
1999 Boys and girls 44.42 15.69 67.11 46.05 
2000 Boys and girls 43.22 39.69 55.91 35.18 
2001 Boys and girls 47.56 24.92 65.86 48.93 
2002 Boys and girls 47.56 16.61 43.91 73.39 
YearSex0–14 years0–4 years5–9 years10–14 years
1987–2002 Boys and girls 35.93 24.95 37.01 43.62 
1987–2002 Boys 36.15 28.65 35.23 42.83 
1987–2002 Girls 35.69 21.13 38.85 44.46 
1987–1991 Boys and girls 31.30 22.96 23.83 45.23 
1992–1996 Boys and girls 32.68 23.29 40.74 32.80 
1997–2001 Boys and girls 43.45 31.21 48.40 48.21 
1987 Boys and girls 38.86 33.23 35.39 46.83 
1988 Boys and girls 27.44 28.15 05.14 47.39 
1989 Boys and girls 20.84 17.32 20.65 23.95 
1990 Boys and girls 28.22 17.55 15.68 48.82 
1991 Boys and girls 41.26 17.79 42.60 59.73 
1992 Boys and girls 27.20 36.14 16.17 30.01 
1993 Boys and girls 33.15 24.65 49.30 25.22 
1994 Boys and girls 35.97 19.23 34.09 50.96 
1995 Boys and girls 41.02 27.13 81.40 15.58 
1996 Boys and girls 26.15 07.09 23.89 42.42 
1997 Boys and girls 37.49 14.75 31.12 59.83 
1998 Boys and girls 45.16 60.87 25.91 50.21 
1999 Boys and girls 44.42 15.69 67.11 46.05 
2000 Boys and girls 43.22 39.69 55.91 35.18 
2001 Boys and girls 47.56 24.92 65.86 48.93 
2002 Boys and girls 47.56 16.61 43.91 73.39 
Table 2—

Number of new cases of type 1 diabetes with midyear population for age-groups (0–4, 5–9, and 10–14 years) in the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada

1987–19911992–19961997–2001Total
Boys     
 0–4 years     
  New cases 13 10 12 35 
  Midyear population 44,266 39,212 32,508 115,986 
 5–9 years     
  New cases 21 18 47 
  Midyear population 48,214 45,003 37,895 132,112 
 10–14 years     
  New cases 16 21 21 58 
  Midyear population 53,901 49,776 44,443 148,120 
 0–14 years     
  New cases 37 52 51 140 
  Midyear population 147,381 133,991 114,846 396,218 
Girls     
 0–4 years     
  New cases 23 
  Midyear population 42,834 38,070 31,579 112,483 
 5–9 years     
  New cases 15 15 18 48 
  Midyear population 47,297 43,356 36,530 127,183 
 10–14 years     
  New cases 31 11 21 63 
  Midyear population 50,002 47,778 42,676 140,456 
 0–14 years     
  New cases 53 34 47 134 
  Midyear population 140,133 129,204 110,785 380,122 
Total     
 0–4 years     
  New cases 20 18 20 58 
  Midyear population 87,100 77,282 64,087 228,469 
 5–9 years     
  New cases 23 36 36 95 
  Midyear population 86,511 88,359 74,425 259,295 
 10–14 years     
  New cases 47 32 42 121 
  Midyear population 103,903 97,554 87,119 288,576 
 0–14 years     
  New cases 90 86 98 274 
  Midyear population 287,514 263,195 225,631 776,340 
1987–19911992–19961997–2001Total
Boys     
 0–4 years     
  New cases 13 10 12 35 
  Midyear population 44,266 39,212 32,508 115,986 
 5–9 years     
  New cases 21 18 47 
  Midyear population 48,214 45,003 37,895 132,112 
 10–14 years     
  New cases 16 21 21 58 
  Midyear population 53,901 49,776 44,443 148,120 
 0–14 years     
  New cases 37 52 51 140 
  Midyear population 147,381 133,991 114,846 396,218 
Girls     
 0–4 years     
  New cases 23 
  Midyear population 42,834 38,070 31,579 112,483 
 5–9 years     
  New cases 15 15 18 48 
  Midyear population 47,297 43,356 36,530 127,183 
 10–14 years     
  New cases 31 11 21 63 
  Midyear population 50,002 47,778 42,676 140,456 
 0–14 years     
  New cases 53 34 47 134 
  Midyear population 140,133 129,204 110,785 380,122 
Total     
 0–4 years     
  New cases 20 18 20 58 
  Midyear population 87,100 77,282 64,087 228,469 
 5–9 years     
  New cases 23 36 36 95 
  Midyear population 86,511 88,359 74,425 259,295 
 10–14 years     
  New cases 47 32 42 121 
  Midyear population 103,903 97,554 87,119 288,576 
 0–14 years     
  New cases 90 86 98 274 
  Midyear population 287,514 263,195 225,631 776,340 

This research was supported by grants from the Janeway Children’s Hospital Foundation, General Hospital Foundation, Banting Research Foundation, and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. A.D.P. is a recipient of Canadian Research Chair in Genetics of Complex Diseases (Tier II).

We thank Mary Pelley and Debbie Pantin for secretarial support and Dr. V. Gadag for statistical expertise.

1.
Franoin RK: Diabetes mellitus.
Pediatr Rev
18
:
383
–392,
1997
2.
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group: The effect of intensive treatment of diabetes on the development and progression of long-term complications in insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.
N Engl J Med
329
:
977
–986,
1993
3.
Karvonen M, Vuk-Kajander M, Moltchanova E, Libman I, LaPorte R, Tuomilehto J: Incidence of childhood type 1 diabetes worldwide.
Diabetes Care
23
:
1516
–1526,
2000
4.
Onkamo P, Vaananen S, Karvonen M, Tuomilehto J: Worldwide increase in incidence of type 1 diabetes: the analysis of the data on published incidence trends.
Diabetologia
42
:
1395
–1403,
1999
5.
Toth EL, Lee KC, Couch RM, Martin LF: High incidence of IDDM over 6 years in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Diabetes Care
16
:
796
–800,
1993
6.
Siemiatycki J, Colle E, Aubert D, Cambell S, Belmonte M: The distribution of type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus by age, sex, secular trend, seasonality, time clusters, and space-time clusters: evidence from Montreal, 1971–1983.
Am J Epidemiol
124
:
545
–560,
1986
7.
Ehrlich RM, Walsh LJ, Falk JA, Middleton PJ, Simpson NE: The incidence of type 1 (insulin dependent) diabetes in Toronto.
Diabetologia
22
:
289
–291,
1982
8.
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, Newfoundland and Labrador Statistics Agency: Demographic characteristics and total population [article online],
2002
. Available at http://infostats@statcan.ca
9.
Meltzer S, Leiter L, Daneman D, Gerstein HC, Lau D, Ludwig S, Yale JF, Zinman B, Lillie D: 1998 clinical practice guidelines for the management of diabetes in Canada.
CMAJ
159
:
S1
–29,
1998
10.
Bingley P, Gale E: Rising incidence of IDDM in Europe.
Diabetes Care
12
:
289
–295,
1989
11.
Citizens IS:
The History of Burin
. Marystown, Canada, South Coast Printers,
1977
12.
Bear JC, Nemel TF, Kennedy JC, Marshall Wit, Power AA, Kolonel VM, Burke GB: Persistent genetic isolation in outport Newfoundland.
Am J Med Genet
27
:
807
–830,
1987
13.
Woods MD, Young TL, Parfrey PS, Hefferton D, Green JS, Davidson WS: Genetic heterogeneity of Bardet Biedl syndrome in a district Canadian population: evidence for a fifth locus.
Genomics
55
:
2
–9,
1999
14.
Andermann E, Jacob JC, Andermann F, Carpenter S, Wolfe L, Berkovic SF: The Newfoundland aggregate of neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis.
Am J Med Genet
5 (Suppl.)
:
111
–116,
1988
15.
Leslie RD, Elliot RB: Early environmental events as a cause of IDDM: evidence and implications.
Diabetes
43
:
843
–850,
1994
16.
Dahlquist G: Environmental risk factors in human type 1 diabetes: an epidemiological perspective.
Diabetes Metab Rev
11
:
37
–46,
1995
17.
Dahlquist G: The etiology of type 1 diabetes: an epidemiological perspective.
Acta Paediatr
425 (Suppl.)
:
5
–10,
1998
18.
Knip M, Åkerblom HK: Environmental factors in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes
107
:
S93
–100,
1999
19.
Vaarala O, Hyöty H, Åkerblom HK: Environmental factors in the etiology of childhood diabetes.
Diabetes Nutr Metab
12
:
75
–85,
1999
20.
Couper JJ: Environmental triggers of type 1 diabetes.
J Pediatr Child Health
37
:
218
–220,
2001
21.
Gerstein HC: Cow’s milk exposure and type 1 diabetes.
Diabetes Care
17
:
13
–19,
1994
22.
Health Canada:
Breast Feeding in Canada: A Review and Update
. Ottawa, Canada, Minister of Health,
1999

A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.