Table 2:
The condition should be an important health problem | Life-threatening diabetic ketoacidosis Life-threatening hypoglycemia Micro- and macrovascular complications |
There should be a treatment for the condition | Insulin |
Facilities for diagnosis and treatment should be available | Pediatric and adult endocrine clinics are prominent in the US |
There should be a latent stage of the disease | Preclinical phase marked by multiple islet autoantibodies in the serum |
There should be a test or examination for the condition | Serum islet autoantibodies |
The test should be acceptable to the population | All four major islet autoantibodies are commercially available |
The natural history of the disease should be adequately understood | T1D is a chronic progressive autoimmune disease (see Figure 1) |
There should be an agreed policy on whom to treat | American Diabetes Association clinical care guidelines |
The total cost of finding a case should be economically balanced in relation to medical expenditure as a whole | Screening modalities are improving, such as using dried blood spots to measure IAs Economic burden of T1D is high |
Case finding should be a continuous process, not just a “once and for all” project | Risk determination can be incorporated into pediatric well child visits |
IAs = islet autoantibodies; T1D = type 1 diabetes; WHO = World Health Organization.