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Absence of Islet Autoantibodies and Modestly Raised Glucose Values at Diabetes Diagnosis Should Lead to Testing for MODY : Lessons From a 5-Year Pediatric Swedish National Cohort Study

Authors :
Carlsson, Annelie
Shepherd, Maggie
Ellard, Sian
Weedon, Michael
Lernmark, Ake
Forsander, Gun
Colclough, Kevin
Brahimi, Qefsere
Valtonen-Andre, Camilla
Ivarsson, Sten A.
Elding Larsson, Helena
Samuelsson, Ulf
Ortqvist, Eva
Groop, Leif
Ludvigsson, Johnny
Marcus, Claude
Hattersley, Andrew T.
Carlsson, Annelie
Shepherd, Maggie
Ellard, Sian
Weedon, Michael
Lernmark, Ake
Forsander, Gun
Colclough, Kevin
Brahimi, Qefsere
Valtonen-Andre, Camilla
Ivarsson, Sten A.
Elding Larsson, Helena
Samuelsson, Ulf
Ortqvist, Eva
Groop, Leif
Ludvigsson, Johnny
Marcus, Claude
Hattersley, Andrew T.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Identifying maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) in pediatric populations close to diabetes diagnosis is difficult. Misdiagnosis and unnecessary insulin treatment are common. We aimed to identify the discriminatory clinical features at diabetes diagnosis of patients with glucokinase (GCK), hepatocyte nuclear factor-1A (HNF1A), and HNF4A MODY in the pediatric population. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Swedish patients (n = 3,933) aged 1–18 years, diagnosed with diabetes May 2005 to December 2010, were recruited from the national consecutive prospective cohort Better Diabetes Diagnosis. Clinical data, islet autoantibodies (GAD insulinoma antigen-2, zinc transporter 8, and insulin autoantibodies), HLA type, and C-peptide were collected at diagnosis. MODY was identified by sequencing GCK, HNF1A, and HNF4A, through either routine clinical or research testing. RESULTS The minimal prevalence of MODY was 1.2%. Discriminatory factors for MODY at diagnosis included four islet autoantibody negativity (100% vs. 11% not-known MODY; P = 2 × 10−44), HbA1c (7.0% vs. 10.7% [53 vs. 93 mmol/mol]; P = 1 × 10−20), plasma glucose (11.7 vs. 26.7 mmol/L; P = 3 × 10−19), parental diabetes (63% vs. 12%; P = 1 × 10−15), and diabetic ketoacidosis (0% vs. 15%; P = 0.001). Testing 303 autoantibody-negative patients identified 46 patients with MODY (detection rate 15%). Limiting testing to the 73 islet autoantibody-negative patients with HbA1c <7.5% (58 mmol/mol) at diagnosis identified 36 out of 46 (78%) patients with MODY (detection rate 49%). On follow-up, the 46 patients with MODY had excellent glycemic control, with an HbA1c of 6.4% (47 mmol/mol), with 42 out of 46 (91%) patients not on insulin treatment. CONCLUSIONS At diagnosis of pediatric diabetes, absence of all islet autoantibodies and modest hyperglycemia (HbA1c <7.5% [58 mmol/mol]) should result in testing for GCK, HNF1A, and HNF4A MODY. Testing all 12% patients negative for four isl<br />Funding Agencies|Swedish Child Diabetes Foundation; National Institutes of HealthUnited States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA [DK-063861]; National Institute for Health Research (U.K.)National Institute for Health Research (NIHR); Wellcome TrustWellcome Trust; Wellcome TrustWellcome Trust [098395/Z/12/Z]

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234711955
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2337.dc19-0747