Download PDF (external access)

Diabetologia

Publication date: 2005-04-01
Volume: 48 Pages: 687 - 694
Publisher: Springer Verlag

Author:

Decochez, Katelijn
Truyen, Inge ; van der Auwera, Bart ; Weets, Isle ; Vandemeulebroucke, Evy ; de Leeuw, Ivo ; Keymeulen, Bart ; Mathieu, Chantal ; Rottiers, Raoul ; Pipeleers, Daniel ; Gorus, Frans

Keywords:

Adolescent, Adult, Autoantibodies, Child, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Disease Progression, Disease-Free Survival, Family, Family Health, Female, Genotype, Glutamate Decarboxylase, HLA-DQ Antigens, Haplotypes, Humans, Insulin Antibodies, Male, Prospective Studies, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Endocrinology & Metabolism, first-degree relatives, glutamate decarboxylase antibodies, HLA DQ, insulin autoantibodies, IA-2 antibodies, islet cell antibodies, prediction, prevention, risk, type 1 diabetes, ISLET-CELL ANTIBODIES, ONSET IDDM PATIENTS, ANTIISLET AUTOANTIBODIES, 1ST-DEGREE RELATIVES, INSULIN, SIBLINGS, MELLITUS, PREDICTION, GAD, AGE, Belgian Diabetes Registry, 1103 Clinical Sciences, 1114 Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine, 1117 Public Health and Health Services, 3202 Clinical sciences, 4206 Public health

Abstract:

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Prevention trials in first-degree relatives of type 1 diabetic patients are hampered by large interindividual differences in progression rate to diabetes. We investigated whether specific combinations of immune and genetic markers can identify subgroups with more homogeneous progression to clinical onset. METHODS: Antibodies against islet cell cytoplasm (ICA), insulin (IAA), glutamate decarboxylase (GADA) and IA-2 protein (IA-2A) were measured in 790 non-diabetic control subjects and 4,589 first-degree relatives under age 40. RESULTS: On first sampling, 11.1% of the siblings presented at least one antibody type (p<0.001 vs other relatives). During follow-up (median 52 months) 43 subjects developed type 1 diabetes (31 siblings, ten offspring of a diabetic father, two offspring of a diabetic mother). Using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and Cox regression, IA-2A conferred the highest 5-year diabetes risk (>50%) irrespective of the number of antibodies present. In initially IA-2A-positive relatives (n=58) progression to hyperglycaemia depended more on HLA DQ status than on type of kinship (84% progression in the presence of DQ2/DQ8 vs 32% in its absence; p<0.003). In IA-2A-negative relatives (n=4,531) 5-year progression to diabetes increased with the number of other antibodies (ICA, GADA and/or IAA) (p<0.001) but overall did not exceed 10% even for two or more antibodies. Among relatives initially positive for one or more antibody type other than IA-2A (n=315), there was significantly more progression to diabetes (overall still <10%) in carriers of DQ2 (p<0.001 vs no DQ2), regardless of DQ8 status. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: These observations suggest that the HLA-DQ-inferred risk of diabetes can proceed through two distinct pathways distinguished by IA-2A status. Combined positivity for DQ2/DQ8 and IA-2A defines a more homogeneous high-risk population for prevention trials than those used so far.