Meta-analysis finds slight IQ difference in children with type 1 diabetes versus peers
This is a meta-analysis of 16 studies including 1,594 children and adolescents aged 19 years or younger with type 1 diabetes. The review synthesized evidence on cognitive outcomes compared to non-diabetic peers. The primary finding was a mean difference of -3.49 in Wechsler Full Scale IQ scores for the type 1 diabetes group, with a 95% CI of -6.16 to -0.82 and a p-value of 0.010. This indicates a statistically significant but slight reduction in IQ.
The authors also synthesized evidence on secondary outcomes including academic performance, executive function, intelligence, language, and memory and learning. The review did not report pooled effect sizes for these secondary outcomes. The authors acknowledge that the evidence is observational and indicates an association, not causation.
Limitations noted include the lack of reported follow-up duration and the absence of data on safety or adverse events. The practice relevance is that type 1 diabetes appears to be associated with slightly lower cognitive outcomes in some areas. Further research is needed to understand the impact on daily functioning and to inform screening for at-risk children.