SARS-CoV-2 Infection and Childhood Islet Autoimmunity
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-13, 02:09authored byGregory J Walker, Kylie-Ann Mallitt, Maria E Craig, Pat Ashwood, Simon C Barry, James D Brown, Joanna Caguicla, Elizabeth A Davis, Emma E Hamilton-Williams, Leonard C Harrison, Aveni Haynes, Tony Huynh, Guinevere Martin, Kelly J McGorm, Grant Morahan, Zin Naing, Helena Oakey, Megan AS Penno, Andrea Sevendal, Richard O Sinnott, Georgia Soldatos, Rebecca L Thomson, Jason Tye-Din, Peter VuillerminPeter Vuillermin, Emily J Ward, John M Wentworth, Peter G Colman, Jennifer J Couper, Ki Wook Kim, William D Rawlinson, Fergus Cameron, Andrew Day, Prudence Lopez, Amanda J Anderson, William Hu, Dao Huynh, Kelly Watson, Sarah Beresford, Deborah Bezuidenhout, Susan Brandrick, Carlie Butterworth, Jacki Catteau, Helen Griffiths, Alison Gwiazdzinski, Candice Hall, Amanda Hulley, Lee Henneken, Renee Kludas, Ying Mateevici, Benjamin Ramoso, Alison Roberts, Alexandra Tully, Rosemary Wood, Sabrina Binkowski, Minh Bui, Abbey Gilbert, Dexing Huang, Ana Karceva, Brydie-Rose Mellor, Gaetano Neselli, Katrina Ngui, Trung Nguyen, Bina Patel, Vanessa Prajitno, Natalie Stone, Thao Tran, Sapphire Vaega, Yan Xu, Cynthia Yau, Rachel Battersby, Bek Brittain, Charles Foster, Christopher Hope, Preston Leung, Alexandra Roth-Schulze, Tim Sadlon, Bree Tillett, Ying Y Wong, Enrique Zozaya-Valdes, Leanne Cavenett
This cohort study examines whether there is a temporal association between SARS-CoV-2 infection and the development of islet autoimmunity among Australian children with a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes.