Genetic similarities between latent autoimmune diabetes and type 1 and type 2 diabetes.

نویسندگان

  • Andrea K Steck
  • George S Eisenbarth
چکیده

In this issue of Diabetes, Cervin et al. (1) investigated whether patients with latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA) (defined as age at diabetes onset 35 years, GADA positive), analyzing known risk alleles for type 1 and type 2 diabetes, share genetic polymorphisms with type 1 diabetes (age at onset 35 years) and/or type 2 diabetes (age at onset 35 years, GADA negative). In their LADA patients, they confirmed an increased frequency of type 1 diabetes–associated genetic risk factors including the heterozygous HLADQB1*0201/*0302 genotype, insulin AA genotype (rs689), and increased CT and TT genotypes of the PTPN22 gene (rs2476601) (2). Somewhat surprisingly, in LADA patients they also found a higher frequency of the type 2 diabetes– associated CT and TT genotypes of the TCF7L2 gene (rs7903146) (3), therefore concluding that LADA shares genetic features with both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The article by Cervin et al. (1) uses the term LADA and immediately abandons the standard meaning of the term, instead equating LADA with GAD-positive patients who developed diabetes after age 35 years. LADA has been defined as the presence of GAD antibodies in patients with age of onset of diabetes after 35 years and insulin independence for at least 6 months after diagnosis (4–6). We agree with the authors in abandoning the standard definition of LADA and would agree with a number of other reviews that suggest one should abandon the term LADA altogether (7,8). A simpler alternative would be islet autoantibody–positive diabetes, which would likely come close to equating with type 1A diabetes, depending upon the specificity of the assays used. Unfortunately, in the current article (1), specificities of the GAD assay varied over time in DASP (Diabetes Autoimmunity Standardization Program) workshops, being as low as 87% (13% false positives), and given Bayes’ theorem and simple calculations, the major conclusions of the study may be in doubt with such a false-positive rate (Fig. 1). We would suggest the hypothesis that in the current article the group termed LADA represents an unknown mixture of type 1A and type 2 diabetes. This might be consistent with a marked increase in high-risk HLA genotype DQB1*0201/DQB1*0302, decreased DQB1*0602, increased PTPN22 and insulin risk polymorphisms (provided by patients with type 1A diabetes), and the type 2 diabetes–associated TCF7L2 polymorphism, with a modest increase (P 0.03) in patients termed GAD positive, but many of whom we believe might be negative with a more consistently specific GAD assay. This alternative hypothesis is difficult to test without improved and more definitive assays for both type 1A and type 2 diabetes. The above comment raises a number of important issues. 1) Can we accurately diagnose type 1A diabetes, and how good are the diagnostic criteria short of pancreatic histology? 2) Can we distinguish LADA from type 1A diabetes occurring in adults or type 2 diabetes? 3) Are the distinctions important and what do they tell us about the pathogenesis of type 1A diabetes? There are now assays for autoantibodies reacting with four major islet autoantigens, confirmed in DASP workshops. Multiple laboratories have assays with high sensitivities and specificities often exceeding 98% for autoantibodies reacting with GAD65, IA-2, insulin, and the newest autoantigen Znt8 (9). In that type 1A diabetes occurs in less than 1% of most populations and multiple autoantibodies are often measured, assays with high specificity are essential for both individual diagnosis and epidemiologic studies. Even a specificity of 99% for a single autoantibody assay is insufficient for the prediction of high diabetes risk. Having persistent autoantibodies reacting to at least two of the four major autoantibodies, however, defines groups with high risk (10,11). GAD65 autoantibodies remain the most sensitive marker for adultonset “autoimmune” diabetes. Though having diabetes by Bayes’ theorem increases the probability of a true GADpositive result, we would suggest it is insufficient with a false-positive rate approaching 10%. Figure 1 illustrates hypothetical overall HLA DR3/4 and TCF7L2 genotype frequencies in GAD-positive versus GAD-negative diabetic subjects assuming a 10% false-positive rate for GAD and a mixture of patients with type 1A and type 2 diabetes. With this hypothetical mixture of GAD-positive type 1A and type 2 diabetes, HLA DR3/4 frequency is still increased to 19.8%, similar to the 27% frequency reported for LADA in Cervin’s article (1) (driven by type 1A diabetes). With a false-positive rate approaching 10%, GAD positivity will not exclude type 2 diabetes. The lack of prediction of diabetes with presence of a single autoantibody is consistent with analysis of pancreatic histology of cadaveric donors. It is likely that expression of a single islet autoantibody will rarely be associated with insulitis, while expression of multiple biochemical autoantibodies will be (12,13). A much larger number of pancreases need evaluation, and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation has initiated a program (nPOD: Network for Pancreatic Organ Donors with Diabetes) headed by Mark Atkinson. A Web site is available for “real-time” viewing of nPOD pancreatic histology (www. jdrfnpod.org). Progressive loss of C-peptide is the outcome of such -cell loss and was observed in studies of From the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Aurora, Colorado. Corresponding author: George S. Eisenbarth, MD, PhD, Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Mail Stop B140, P.O. Box 6511, Aurora, CO 80045-6511. E-mail: [email protected]. DOI: 10.2337/db07-1786 © 2008 by the American Diabetes Association. See accompanying original article, p. 1433. COMMENTARY

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Diabetes

دوره 57 5  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2008