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Systematic Population Screening, Using Biomarkers and Genetic Testing, Identifies 2.5% of the U.K. Pediatric Diabetes Population With Monogenic Diabetes.

Authors :
Shepherd, Maggie
Shields, Beverley
Hammersley, Suzanne
Hudson, Michelle
McDonald, Timothy J.
Colclough, Kevin
Oram, Richard A.
Knight, Bridget
Hyde, Christopher
Cox, Julian
Mallam, Katherine
Moudiotis, Christopher
Smith, Rebecca
Fraser, Barbara
Robertson, Simon
Greene, Stephen
Ellard, Sian
Pearson, Ewan R.
Hattersley, Andrew T.
UNITED Team
Source :
Diabetes Care. Nov2016, Vol. 39 Issue 11, p1879-1888. 10p. 2 Diagrams, 2 Charts.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

<bold>Objective: </bold>Monogenic diabetes is rare but is an important diagnosis in pediatric diabetes clinics. These patients are often not identified as this relies on the recognition of key clinical features by an alert clinician. Biomarkers (islet autoantibodies and C-peptide) can assist in the exclusion of patients with type 1 diabetes and allow systematic testing that does not rely on clinical recognition. Our study aimed to establish the prevalence of monogenic diabetes in U.K. pediatric clinics using a systematic approach of biomarker screening and targeted genetic testing.<bold>Research Design and Methods: </bold>We studied 808 patients (79.5% of the eligible population) <20 years of age with diabetes who were attending six pediatric clinics in South West England and Tayside, Scotland. Endogenous insulin production was measured using the urinary C-peptide creatinine ratio (UCPCR). C-peptide-positive patients (UCPCR ≥0.2 nmol/mmol) underwent islet autoantibody (GAD and IA2) testing, with patients who were autoantibody negative undergoing genetic testing for all 29 identified causes of monogenic diabetes.<bold>Results: </bold>A total of 2.5% of patients (20 of 808 patients) (95% CI 1.6-3.9%) had monogenic diabetes (8 GCK, 5 HNF1A, 4 HNF4A, 1 HNF1B, 1 ABCC8, 1 INSR). The majority (17 of 20 patients) were managed without insulin treatment. A similar proportion of the population had type 2 diabetes (3.3%, 27 of 808 patients).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>This large systematic study confirms a prevalence of 2.5% of patients with monogenic diabetes who were <20 years of age in six U.K. clinics. This figure suggests that ∼50% of the estimated 875 U.K. pediatric patients with monogenic diabetes have still not received a genetic diagnosis. This biomarker screening pathway is a practical approach that can be used to identify pediatric patients who are most appropriate for genetic testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01495992
Volume :
39
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Diabetes Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119093427
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2337/dc16-0645