| Literature DB >> 33441381 |
James J Ross1, Clive H Wasserfall1, Rhonda Bacher2, Daniel J Perry1, Kieran McGrail1, Amanda L Posgai1, Xiaoru Dong2, Andrew Muir3, Xia Li4,5, Martha Campbell-Thompson1,6, Todd M Brusko1,7, Desmond A Schatz7, Michael J Haller7, Mark A Atkinson8,7.
Abstract
Exocrine pancreas abnormalities are increasingly recognized as features of type 1 diabetes. We previously reported reduced serum trypsinogen levels and in a separate study, smaller pancreata at and before disease onset. We hypothesized that three pancreas enzymes (amylase, lipase, and trypsinogen) might serve as serological biomarkers of pancreas volume and risk for type 1 diabetes. Amylase, lipase, and trypsinogen were measured from two independent cohorts, together comprising 800 serum samples from single-autoantibody-positive (1AAb+) and multiple-AAb+ (≥2AAb+) subjects, individuals with recent-onset or established type 1 diabetes, their AAb-negative (AAb-) first-degree relatives, and AAb- control subjects. Lipase and trypsinogen were significantly reduced in ≥2AAb+, recent-onset, and established type 1 diabetes subjects versus control subjects and 1AAb+, while amylase was reduced only in established type 1 diabetes. Logistic regression models demonstrated trypsinogen plus lipase (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUROC] = 81.4%) performed equivalently to all three enzymes (AUROC = 81.4%) in categorizing ≥2AAb+ versus 1AAb+ subjects. For cohort 2 (n = 246), linear regression demonstrated lipase and trypsinogen levels could individually and collectively serve as indicators of BMI-normalized relative pancreas volume (RPVBMI, P < 0.001), previously measured by MRI. Serum lipase and trypsinogen levels together provide the most sensitive serological biomarker of RPVBMI and may improve disease staging in pretype 1 diabetes.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33441381 PMCID: PMC7980193 DOI: 10.2337/db20-0995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461