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Type 1 diabetes risk and autoantibody positivity in Sardinian migrants in the province of Pavia.

Authors :
Tenconi, Maria T.
Devoti, Gabriele
Rizzo, Maria
Roncarolo, Federico
Bernasconi, Andrea
Lanati, Niccolò
Calcaterra, Valeria
Songini, Marco
Locatelli, Mattia
Bottazzo, Gian F.
Source :
North American Journal of Medical Sciences; Jul2009, Vol. 1 Issue 2, p48-53, 6p, 1 Diagram, 4 Charts
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Background: Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease. Genetics as well as environmental factors seem to play a role in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes. Aims: We sought to investigate the possible relationship between migration from Sardinia to a low incidence area of type 1 diabetes (Lombardy) and the prevalence of autoantibody positivity. Methods: We enrolled 554 Sardinian immigrants and 226 of their offspring. All subjects underwent a complete anamnestic evaluation. Fasting blood glucose, HbA1c, GADA and IA-2 were measured in all study participants. Additionally, the presence of risk haplotypes (HLA-DR3 -DR4 and DQB1/0302) was determined. After a seven-year follow-up, high genetic risk and/or autoantibody positivity subjects were re-evaluated. Results: Among Sardinian immigrants, the prevalence of type 1 diabetes was 0.9%, while in the offspring group, the prevalence was 0.4%. After removing type 1 diabetic patients, the GADA prevalence was 2.4% in the immigrant group and 3.8% among their offspring. Among Sardinian immigrants, the IA-2 prevalence was 0.7%, while all offspring were IA-2 negative. After a seven-year follow-up, 85.7% of GADA-positive migrants had persistent GADA positivity. Two GADA-negative offspring subjects turned positive. None of the study participants developed diabetes during the follow-up. Conclusions: The present study showed a higher prevalence of GADA positivity within Sardinian immigrants at high genetic risk; GADA positivity may represent the first detectable phase of type 1 diabetes. After a seven-year follow-up, none of the high genetic/antibody risk group subjects developed type 1 diabetes. However, it seems reasonable to strictly control high-risk individuals in order to diagnose subclinical diabetes. (Tenconi MT, Devoti G, Rizzo M, Federico Roncarolo F, Bernasconi A, Lanati N, Calcaterra V, Songini M, Locatelli M, Gian F. Bottazzo Type 11 diabetes risk and autoantibody positivity in Sardinian migrants in the province of Pavia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22501541
Volume :
1
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
North American Journal of Medical Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
60948324