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Even before he was born Alex Chatterton was already doing his bit to help find a cure for type 1 diabetes. Alex’s mother Justine lives with the disease and knows all too well how all-encompassing it can be to manage.

When the opportunity came to sign up her children, Penny, six, and Alex, four, for diabetes research in utero, it was an obvious yes. That was the start of Alex’s diabetes research journey.

Now, the happy four-year-old is part of a world-first CGM study looking at changes in blood sugar patterns in very young children at risk of type 1 diabetes, in the hopes of finding the right to time to intervene with future treatments to delay or prevent the condition.

He is one of 68 participants in the Australia wide CGM study. Like Alex, 42 of the participants have T1D-specific multiple antibodies, meaning the immune process underlying the condition was under way.

The Perth-led study is monitoring children like Alex regularly, using a small device called a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) to pick up early changes in glucose patterns in the children known to be at risk of developing T1D, before they have any symptoms. These can start months to years before they would usually be diagnosed.


Justine said being part of the study had given them the knowledge that Alex was already multiple antibody positive, giving him a much higher risk of developing the condition.

Being aware that Alex is multiple antibody positive has given us the warning that a diabetes diagnosis is most likely going to happen and it can prepare us for his management and prevent him needing major medical intervention at diagnosis.


Justine Chatterton

  • Type 1 diabetes is a chronic autoimmune disease that results from the immune system attacking the insulin producing cells of the pancreas
  • Currently, type 1 diabetes cannot be prevented but it can be managed by administering insulin, monitoring glucose levels, having a healthy, balanced diet and getting regular physical activity
  • In WA, about 160 children are diagnosed with diabetes every year