| Literature DB >> 29532109 |
Anna E Long1, Isabel V Wilson1, Dorothy J Becker2, Ingrid M Libman2, Vincent C Arena2, F Susan Wong3, Andrea K Steck4, Marian J Rewers4, Liping Yu4, Peter Achenbach5, Rosaura Casas6, Johnny Ludvigsson6, Alistair J K Williams1, Kathleen M Gillespie7.
Abstract
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Multiple islet autoimmunity increases risk of diabetes, but not all individuals positive for two or more islet autoantibodies progress to disease within a decade. Major islet autoantibodies recognise insulin (IAA), GAD (GADA), islet antigen-2 (IA-2A) and zinc transporter 8 (ZnT8A). Here we describe the baseline characteristics of a unique cohort of 'slow progressors' (n = 132) who were positive for multiple islet autoantibodies (IAA, GADA, IA-2A or ZnT8A) but did not progress to diabetes within 10 years.Entities:
Keywords: HLA class II; Islet autoantibodies; Slow progression; Type 1 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29532109 PMCID: PMC6449004 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-018-4591-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Description of participants in the SNAIL study
| Characteristic | Overall | BABY DIAB | DAISY | ABIS | BOX | Pittsburgh |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 132 | 22 | 30 | 11 | 36 | 33 |
| Age at first antibody test; Median (IQR) | 7 (1–18) | 1 | 1 (1–2) | 1 | 18 (13–38) | 18 (11–33)a |
| Age at mAab+ sample; Median (IQR) | 10 (5–20) | 5 (2–5) | 7 (4–10) | 5 | 18 (13–38) | 18 (11–37) |
| Male; | 69 (54) | 16 (73) | 17 (57) | 7 (64) | 15 (42) | 17 (52) |
| Years of follow-up since mAab+ detection; Median (IQR) | 14 (12–19) | 13 (11–14) | 12 (1–13) | 13 (13–14) | 17 (14–24) | 20 (13–26) |
| Diabetes-free at follow-up; | 90 (68) | 12 (55) | 23 (77) | 10 (100) | 22 (61) | 23 (70) |
| Genetic data available | 121 | 22 | 30 | 10 | 36 | 23 |
aEarliest sample available
IQR, interquartile range; mAab+, multiple autoantibody-positive
Fig. 1 Proportion of slow progressors positive for (a) IAA, (b) GADA, (c) IA-2A and (d) ZnT8A at the first available mAab-positive sample differed between the cohorts (p=0.001, p=0.018, p=0.007 and p=0.183, for each antibody, respectively). Black bars show overall percentage, white bars show percentage for slow progressors from each study. The ABIS participants were not tested for ZnT8A in their first mAab-positive sample
Combinations of autoantibodies at first mAab-positive visit for 117 slow progressors tested for IAA, GADA, IA-2A and ZnT8A
| Autoantibody combination | Number of individuals (%) |
|---|---|
| IAA+GADA+IA-2A+ZnT8A | 9 (8) |
| IAA+GADA+IA-2A | 6 (5) |
| IAA+GADA+ZnT8A | 11 (9) |
| IAA+IA-2A+ZnT8A | 2 (2) |
| GADA+IA-2A+ZnT8A | 22 (19) |
| IAA+GADA | 31 (26) |
| IAA+IA-2A | 0 |
| IAA+ZnT8A | 6 (5) |
| GADA+IA-2A | 8 (7) |
| GADA+ZnT8A | 20 (17) |
| IA-2A+ZnT8A | 2 (2) |
Fig. 2HLA risks for (a) proportion of HLA class II high risk (black), intermediate risk (grey) or low risk (white) genotypes in BOX probands according to age at diagnosis (n=2075, including 348 rapid progressors diagnosed under 5 years of age) and slow progressors (SPs, n=121, p=0.011 for HLA class II risk in slow vs rapid progressors); and (b) proportion of participants carrying HLA class II DQ2 (white) or DQ8 (black) haplotypes in BOX (n=36), BABYDIAB (n=22), DAISY (n=30), Pittsburgh study (n=21) and ABIS (n=10)