| Literature DB >> 28331855 |
James C Barton1, Ronald T Acton2.
Abstract
Diabetes in whites of European descent with hemochromatosis was first attributed to pancreatic siderosis. Later observations revealed that the pathogenesis of diabetes in HFE hemochromatosis is multifactorial and its clinical manifestations are heterogeneous. Increased type 2 diabetes risk in HFE hemochromatosis is associated with one or more factors, including abnormal iron homeostasis and iron overload, decreased insulin secretion, cirrhosis, diabetes in first-degree relatives, increased body mass index, insulin resistance, and metabolic syndrome. In p.C282Y homozygotes, serum ferritin, usually elevated at hemochromatosis diagnosis, largely reflects body iron stores but not diabetes risk. In persons with diabetes type 2 without hemochromatosis diagnoses, serum ferritin levels are higher than those of persons without diabetes, but most values are within the reference range. Phlebotomy therapy to achieve iron depletion does not improve diabetes control in all persons with HFE hemochromatosis. The prevalence of type 2 diabetes diagnosed today in whites of European descent with and without HFE hemochromatosis is similar. Routine iron phenotyping or HFE genotyping of patients with type 2 diabetes is not recommended. Herein, we review diabetes in HFE hemochromatosis and the role of iron in diabetes pathogenesis in whites of European descent with and without HFE hemochromatosis.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28331855 PMCID: PMC5346371 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9826930
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Res Impact factor: 4.011
Figure 1Diabetes in nonscreening hemochromatosis. Percentages of patients diagnosed to have hemochromatosis phenotypes in nonscreening settings who also had diabetes [1, 2, 8–10, 42, 131, 167–169]. HFE mutation genotyping was a diagnostic adjunct in three studies [1, 2, 10].
Figure 2Diabetes in screening hemochromatosis. Percentages of participants in population-based screening studies discovered to have HFE p.C282Y homozygosity who reported that they had previous diagnoses of diabetes [115, 170–172]. There were two such reports from 2002 and two others from 2008. Hemochromatosis was also evaluated with iron phenotyping. In the respective populations, the prevalence of diabetes in p.C282Y homozygotes and control subjects did not differ significantly.
Figure 3Cirrhosis in nonscreening hemochromatosis. Percentages of patients diagnosed to have hemochromatosis phenotypes who also had cirrhosis [3, 8, 169, 173–177]. There were two such reports from 1997. HFE mutation genotyping was a diagnostic adjunct in the more recent study [3]. Modified from [25, 178]. Greater proportions of men than women had cirrhosis. See cirrhosis prevalence in screening hemochromatosis cases in Figure 4.
Figure 4Cirrhosis in screening hemochromatosis. Percentages of participants in population-based studies [3, 172, 179, 180] and in an archived liver biopsy collection (second 2000 publication) [181] discovered to have HFE p.C282Y homozygosity who were previously diagnosed or were subsequently demonstrated to have advanced hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis by biopsy [3, 170, 172, 180, 181]. Greater proportions of men than women had cirrhosis. See cirrhosis prevalence in nonscreening hemochromatosis cases in Figure 3.
Measures of body iron stores.
| Measures | Specimen | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
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| Iron removed to achieve iron depletion | Blood | Standard reference method; therapeutic; minimally invasive; quantitative; whole body; widely available | Lengthy; inconvenient; moderate cost | [ |
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| Hepatic iron content | Biopsy | Invasive; quantitative; widely available; strong correlation with quantitative phlebotomy; permits evaluation of liver histology | Possible inadequate specimen; risks of pain, bleeding, pneumothorax, bile leak; single organ; moderate cost | [ |
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| Iron in liver | SQUID | Noninvasive; quantitative | Few devices exist; not routinely available; single organ; expensive | [ |
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| Iron in liver, heart, pancreas | Magnetic resonance scan | Noninvasive; quantitative; detects iron overload over wide range of concentrations | Equipment expensive; all MRI devices not calibrated to measure iron | [ |
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| Serum ferritin | Blood | Widely available; semiquantitative; inexpensive | Elevated in many subjects with excess alcohol consumption, inflammation, infection, chronic disease, malignancy; fair correlation with measured iron stores | [ |
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| Serum transferrin receptor/serum ferritin (sTfR/SF) | Blood | Widely available; semiquantitative; inexpensive | Unsuitable for subjects with inflammation, infection, chronic disease, malignancy; not validated for iron overload study | [ |
Proposed roles of iron in type 2 diabetes.
| Variable | Mechanism | Reference |
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| Body iron status | Modulates transcription, membrane expression/affinity of insulin receptor expression in hepatocytes, influences insulin-dependent gene expression | [ |
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| Dietary iron | Controls circadian hepatic glucose metabolism through heme synthesis | [ |
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| Intake of processed meat, red meat | Higher risk of type 2 diabetes | [ |
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| Dietary iron restriction, iron chelation | Increased insulin sensitivity, beta-cell function ( | [ |
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| Iron chelation | Ameliorates adipocyte hypertrophy via suppression of oxidative stress, inflammatory cytokines, and macrophage infiltration | [ |
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| Starvation | Increased liver | [ |
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| High fat diet | Increased hepatic iron regulatory protein-1, increased transferrin receptor 1 expression, increased hepcidin, decreased ferroportin ( | [ |
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| Cellular iron uptake | Stimulated by insulin | [ |
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| Excess hepatic iron | Hyperinsulinemia due to decreased insulin extraction, impaired insulin secretion | [ |
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| Iron-related proteins in adipose tissue | Expression modulated by insulin resistance | [ |
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| Adipocyte iron | Regulates leptin and food intake | [ |
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| Adiponectin | Transcription negatively regulated by iron | [ |
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| Visfatin | Positive association with serum prohepcidin, negative correlation with serum soluble transferrin receptor in men with altered glucose tolerance | [ |
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| Heme oxygenase-1 promoter microsatellite polymorphism | Higher ferritin with short (GT)( | [ |
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| Antioxidants | Lower levels partially explained by iron alterations | [ |
Diabetes risk in HFE hemochromatosis.
| Risk factors | Proposed mechanisms and pathophysiology |
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| Increased iron entry into beta cells of islets | Increased transferrin saturation and transport via transferrin receptors |
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| Decreased insulin secretion | Islet inflammation |
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| Cirrhosis | Associated with severe iron overload, pancreatic fibrosis |
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| History of diabetes in first-degree relatives | Multiple genetic and acquired factors |
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| Genetic markers | Multiple loci for type 2 diabetes |