Show Notes
Wei Y et al., Nature Communications - A Swedish nationwide register study of 2.93 million children born 1982–2010 found that the heritability of childhood-onset type 1 diabetes remained high (~0.83) and stable over 30 years, while changes in measured environmental factors explained only a small fraction of the rise in incidence. Key terms: type 1 diabetes, heritability, Sweden, childhood-onset, environmental factors.
Study Highlights:
The study followed 2,928,704 children and recorded 20,086 childhood-onset T1D cases, showing incidence rose from birth year 1982 to 2000 then plateaued. Heritability estimated by AE liability models was 0.83 (95% CI 0.79–0.86) and remained stable across birth years and age-at-onset groups, with higher heritability at younger ages. Measured environmental and perinatal factors (including maternal smoking, maternal age, mode of delivery, gestational age and childhood adiposity) together explained only about 5–8% (under 10%) of the increasing incidence, implying additional or interacting drivers.
Conclusion:
Heritability of childhood-onset T1D in Sweden remained high and stable from 1982–2010, and available environmental factors account for only a small part of the observed increase in incidence, pointing to other environmental drivers or gene–environment interactions.
Music:
Enjoy the music based on this article at the end of the episode.
Article title:
Stable heritability of type 1 diabetes in a Swedish Nationwide Cohort Study
First author:
Wei Y
Journal:
Nature Communications
DOI:
10.1038/s41467-025-60813-2
Reference:
Wei Y, Andersson T, Liu S, Feychting M, Kuja-Halkola R & Carlsson S. Stable heritability of type 1 diabetes in a Swedish Nationwide Cohort Study. Nature Communications (2025) 16:5327. doi:10.1038/s41467-025-60813-2
License:
This episode is based on an open-access article published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0) – https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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QC:
This episode was checked against the original article PDF and publication metadata for the episode release published on 2025-07-27.
QC Scope:
- article metadata and core scientific claims from the narration
- excludes analogies, intro/outro, and music
- transcript coverage: Audited the spoken content for alignment with the article's key findings: heritability and AE modeling, Swedish nationwide cohort design, incidence trends, environmental mediation, and the diabetogenic environment hypothesis; plus limitations and interpretation. Excluded non-scientific asides and promotional material.
- transcript topics: Heritability concept and AE liability threshold model; Swedish nationwide cohort and sibling design; Incidence trends 1982–2000 rise and 2000–2010 plateau; Environmental factors and causal mediation analysis; Diabetogenic environment theory and gene–environment interaction; Limitations and unmeasured factors in the study
QC Summary:
- factual score: 10/10
- metadata score: 10/10
- supported core claims: 6
- claims flagged for review: 0
- metadata checks passed: 4
- metadata issues found: 0
Metadata Audited:
- article_doi
- article_title
- article_journal
- license
Factual Items Audited:
- Heritability estimate ~0.83 (83%) and stable across birth years
- Incidence almost doubled from 1982 to 2000, then plateaued 2001–2010
- Environmental factors (known/measured) explain ~5–8% of the rise in incidence
- Maternal smoking during pregnancy explains ~3.2% of the rise; maternal age at delivery ~0.8%
- Childhood overweight/obesity explained ~2–4% (boys) and ~1–2% (girls) of the rise
- Non-shared environmental contribution ~0.17 (17%), shared environment ~0
QC result: Pass.