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‘Silent killer’: CUHK to screen 9,000 Hongkongers under 44 for diabetes risk

Those eligible for the test must have at least one risk factor, such as family history of the disease, exercising less than 150 minutes per week, or obesity

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Professor Juliana Chan (fourth from left) says the disease poses a lifelong risk. Photo: Eugene Lee
Leopold Chen

A top university in Hong Kong has said it aims to test 9,000 adults aged under 44 to identify their risk of diabetes and provide interventions to delay or prevent its onset.

Researchers from the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) also revealed on Monday that they had so far tested more than 3,300 people with at least one risk factor, such as a family history of diabetes or obesity, and found that 45 per cent of them were at risk of the disease.

Young-onset diabetes, which is diagnosed before the age of 40, could lead to higher risks of complications and even death, undermining patients’ quality of life, they said.

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Citing study figures, the researchers said that one in every five diabetes patients in the city was diagnosed before the age of 40, while the prevalence of type 2 diabetes was rising among residents under 40.

“Young-onset diabetes is a silent killer globally,” said Professor Andrea Luk On-yan from CUHK’s department of medicine and therapeutics.

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According to Luk, the incidence of cardiovascular and chronic kidney diseases has been higher among people with young-onset diabetes than those diagnosed later in life.

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