| Literature DB >> 34983671 |
Maria Månsson Martinez1, Lampros Spiliopoulos2, Marlena Maziarz2, Carina Törn2, Falastin Salami2, Daniel Agardh2, Jorma Toppari3,4, Åke Lernmark2, Jukka Kero3,4, Riitta Veijola5,6, Päivi Tossavainen5,6, Sauli Palmu7, Markus Lundgren2, Henrik Borg2, Anastasia Katsarou2, Helena Elding Larsson2, Mikael Knip8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Individuals with multiple islet autoantibodies are at increased risk for clinical type 1 diabetes and may proceed gradually from stage to stage complicating the recruitment to secondary prevention studies. We evaluated multiple islet autoantibody positive subjects before randomisation for a clinical trial 1 month apart for beta-cell function, glucose metabolism and continuous glucose monitoring (CGM). We hypothesized that the number and type of islet autoantibodies in combination with different measures of glucose metabolism including fasting glucose, HbA1c, oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), intra venous glucose tolerance test (IvGTT) and CGM allows for more precise staging of autoimmune type 1 diabetes than the number of islet autoantibodies alone.Entities:
Keywords: Continuous glucose monitoring; Glucose metabolism; Islet autoantibodies; beta-cell function
Year: 2022 PMID: 34983671 PMCID: PMC8728995 DOI: 10.1186/s40842-021-00135-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Diabetes Endocrinol ISSN: 2055-8260
Characteristics of subjects enrolled in the TEFA study (n = 57)
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Swedish participants (n, %) | 35 (61.4%) |
| Finnish participants (n, %) | 22 (38.6%) |
| Age (years) (median, IQR) | 11.3 (8.4, 16.0) |
| Females (n, %) | 30 (52.6%) |
| First-degree relatives (vs. general population) (n, %) | 17 (29.8%) |
| Weight (kg) (median, IQR) | 44.8 (25.9, 60.3) |
| Height (cm) (median, IQR) | 151.0 (133.9, 166.4) |
| HbA1c (mmol/mol) (median, IQR) | 33.0 (31.0, 36.0) |
| HOMA2%B (median, IQR) | 91.9 (65.7, 120.6) |
| HOMA2%S (median, IQR) | 87.9 (66.2, 120.8) |
IQR Interquartile range
Autoantibody status combinations detected for each subject up to visit 2 (n = 57)
| IAA (n positive subjects = 28) | GADA (n positive subjects = 52) | IA-2A (n positive subjects = 38) | ZnT8W/Q/R (n positive subjects = 40) | Autoantibody count | n (%) subjects with a given autoantibody combination | Autoantibody combination group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| + | + | + | + | 4 | 12 (21.1) | A |
| – | + | + | + | 3 | 10 (17.5) | B |
| – | + | – | + | 2 | 10 (17.5) | C |
| + | + | + | – | 3 | 4 (7.0) | D |
| + | + | – | + | 3 | 3 (5.3) | D |
| + | + | – | – | 2 | 6 (10.5) | D |
| + | – | + | + | 3 | 3 (5.3) | D |
| – | + | + | – | 2 | 7 (12.3) | D |
| – | – | + | + | 2 | 2 (3.5) | D |
The autoantibody combination group in the right-most column was defined based on the three most frequent autoantibody combinations, forming groups A-C (n = 12, 10, 10, respectively), with group D (n = 25) comprised of all remaining autoantibody combinations
Fig. 1The distribution of fasting glucose (mmol/L) (1A) and HbA1c (mmol/mol) (1B) at visits 1 and 2 (n = 57). The boxplot indicates the median, the interquartile range, the violin around the boxplot shows the shape of the distribution of values at each visit, with individual data points shown in grey. The fasting glucose was measured 10 min before the start of IvGTT at visit 1 and OGTT at visit 2. The dashed lines at 7 mmol/L in 1A and at 42 mmol/mol in 1B indicate the World Health Organization thresholds above which subject is considered to be diabetic. Fasting glucose measurements were not found to differ between visits 1 and 2, nor did HbA1c at visits 1 and 2 (Wilcoxon test p-value 0.99 and 0.27, respectively)
Fig. 2Assessment of glucose metabolism based on OGTT (2A and B), IvGTT (2B) (n = 57) and CGM (2C) (n = 24). In panel 2A we show the individual trajectories of blood glucose measured using a 2-h OGTT test at visit 2. Based on glucose values at minute 120, we identified 7 subjects (labelled with red and orange subject labels) would be considered to have impaired glucose tolerance (orange labels) or to have clinical type 1 diabetes (red labels) according to the World Health Organization (see grey panel in 2A). In panel 2B we show a scatterplot and a regression line between the log2-transformed area under the curve (AUC) of OGTT glucose measurements versus the log2-transformed FPIR measurements from IvGTT at visit 1. The subjects labelled in orange and red correspond to those in panel 2A. In panel 2C we present the distributions of the glucose measurements obtained from the Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM) over a 7-day period starting at visit 2. The subjects were sorted according to an increasing median glucose value. The individual glucose measurements are shown as points, with the boxplots showing the median and interquartile range, and the violin plot showing the distribution of the CGM glucose values for a given individual. The subjects shown in orange and red correspond to those in panels 2A and 2B
The estimates and the 95% confidence intervals of the association between log2-transformed FPIR (mU/L) and autoantibody status, type or count, adjusted for age and sex
| Covariates | Model 1 ( | Model 2 ( | Model 3 ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Est (95% CI) | Est (95% CI) | Est (95% CI) | |
| Autoantibody status (positive vs. negative) | |||
| IAA | −0.20 (− 0.89, 0.49) 0.564 | ||
| GADA | 0.32 (− 1.02, 1.65) 0.637 | ||
| IA-2A | −0.40 (− 1.12, 0.31) 0.262 | ||
| ZnT8(W/Q/R)A | |||
| Number of autoantibodies | −0.39 (− 0.83, 0.05) 0.084 | ||
| Autoantibody combination group: | |||
| A vs. D | −0.45 (−1.39, 0.49) 0.345 | ||
| B vs. D | −0.68 (−1.64, 0.27) 0.158 | ||
| C vs. D | −0.17 (−1.18, 0.84) 0.736 | ||
| Age (per 10 years) | 0.15 (−0.16, 0.45) 0.343 | 0.09 (− 0.23, .040) 0.580 | 0.17 (− 0.16, 0.49) 0.307 |
| Male vs. female | − 0.14 (− 0.83, 0.56) 0.695 | −0.08 (− 0.82, 0.65) 0.818 | −0.24 (− 0.98, 0.51) 0.525 |
The estimates and the 95% confidence intervals of the association between log2-transformed FPIR (mU/L) as the outcome and three measures of autoantibody status as predictors (status, count, combination group), adjusting for age and sex, estimated using linear models. The autoantibody information used as the main predictors was modeled as: the autoantibody status for IAA, GADA, IA-2A and any of ZnT8(W/Q/R) A, with negative status being the reference, the number of autoantibodies detected (possible values were 2, 3, or 4), and the autoantibody status combination group A-D (see Table 2) with group D as the reference
Fig. 3FPIR (mU/L) levels and autoantibody status. The distribution of log2-transformed first-phase insulin response (FPIR) (mU/L) stratified by presence of IAA, GADA, IA-2A or ZnT8(Q/R/Q)A (n = 57). The boxplot indicates the median, the interquartile range, the violin around the boxplot shows the shape of the distribution, with individual data points shown in grey. Based on the model in Table 3 with the status of the four antibodies as the main predictor, adjusted for age and sex, log2(FPIR) was not found to be statistically significantly different depending on the status of IAA, GADA or IA-2A (p = 0.564, 0.637, 0.262), but there was some evidence suggesting that FPIR is lower for those with at least one of ZnT8(Q/R/W)A present compared to those with no ZnT8(Q/R/W)A (1.74 mU/L lower (95% CI = 1.01, 2.99), p = 0.046)