| Literature DB >> 24705260 |
Richard W Carroll1, Rinki Murphy2.
Abstract
Monogenic forms of beta cell diabetes account for approximately 1%-2% of all cases of diabetes, yet remain underdiagnosed. Overlapping clinical features with common forms of diabetes, make diagnosis challenging. A genetic diagnosis of monogenic diabetes in many cases alters therapy, affects prognosis, enables genetic counseling, and has implications for cascade screening of extended family members. We describe those types of monogenic beta cell diabetes which are recognisable by distinct clinical features and have implications for altered management; the cost effectiveness of making a genetic diagnosis in this setting; the use of complementary diagnostic tests to increase the yield among the vast majority of patients who will have commoner types of diabetes which are summarised in a clinical algorithm; and the vital role of cascade genetic testing to enhance case finding.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24705260 PMCID: PMC3927568 DOI: 10.3390/genes4040522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Diagnostic algorithm for assessment of suspected monogenic diabetes: diabetes diagnosed at <35 years of age.
Characteristic Phenotypes of the commonly encountered diabetes subtypes, illustrating the clinically useful differences between type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and monogenic forms of diabetes.
| Features associated | Type 1 diabetes | Young onset Type 2 diabetes | Monogenic diabetes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GCK ∗ | HNF1A # | HNF4A # | HNF1B # | Neonatal diabetes | MIDD ≠ | |||
| Yes | No | No | No ∞ | No ∞ | No | Yes | Yes/No | |
| 2%–4% | Yes | Yes ≈ | Yes | Yes | Yes | variable | Mother | |
| 6 months to adulthood | Adolescence and young adulthood | Birth | Teens to young adulthood | Teens to young adulthood | Teens to young adulthood | <6 months | Young adulthood | |
| Population frequency | Increased frequency | Population frequency | Population frequency | Population frequency | Population frequency | Population frequency | Rare | |
| Acute General hyperglycaemia | Progressive hyperglycemia | Stable, mild fasting glycaemia | Post-prandial hyperglycaemia initially, progressing to general hyperglycemia | Post-prandial hyperglycaemia initially, progressing to general hyperglycemia | Post-prandial hyperglycaemia initially | Acute General hyperglycaemia | Variable dysglycaemic pattern either acute or slowly progressive | |
| Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | |
| Very low/Absent | Raised/Normal | Normal | Low but Detectable | Low but Detectable | Low but Detectable | Absent but detectable once treated with SU | Low but detectable | |
| Normal | High/High normal | Normal | Very low | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal | |
| Other autoimmune disease (Thyroid, coeliac | Dyslipidaemia, PCOS, Hypertension, Acanthosis Nigricans | Absence of microvascular and macrovascular complications | Low renal threshold for glucose in early stages of diabetes | Macrosomia and transient neonatal hypoglycaemia | High renal involvement e.g., cysts | Transient in 50% of cases, although may relapse | Deafness, short stature, macular dystrophy | |
* = Glucokinase; # = Hepatocyte nuclear factor; ≠ = Mitochondrial diabetes and deafness; ∞ = Excellent responses to Sulphonylurea therapy are commonly noted; ≈ = whilst the autosomal dominant inheritance pattern requires that at least one parent must be a carrier of the mutated gene, GCK mutations are frequently subclinical and an absence of a known family history of diabetes is not uncommon; ± = β cell antibodies are detected in approximately 90% of patients with type 1 diabetes at onset of dysglycaemia although the sensitivity declines later in the disease. Absent autoantibodies >5 years following onset are commonly seen in confirmed type 1 diabetes. Conversely, a small number of patients with type 2 diabetes and monogenic diabetes will have one or more detectable ß cell antibodies; ¥ = PCOS = Polycystic ovary syndrome.