Till A-M, Kenk H, Rjasanowski I, Wassmuth R, Walschus U, Kerner W, Schlosser M
Department of Pediatrics, Greifswald University Medical Centre, Greifswald, Germany.
Institute of Pathophysiology, Research Group of Predictive Diagnostics, Greifswald University Medical Centre, Karlsburg, Germany.
Diabet Med. 2015 Aug;32(8):1008-16. doi: 10.1111/dme.12677. Epub 2015 Jan 23.
To investigate the occurrence of diabetes-associated autoantibodies and cumulative Type 1 diabetes risk over 18 years in a general population of schoolchildren.
In the Karlsburg Type 1 Diabetes Risk Study, 11 986 schoolchildren from north-eastern Germany without a family history of diabetes were screened for glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies, insulinoma-associated antigen-2 antibodies and insulin autoantibodies by radioligand binding assay. Those children found to be autoantibody-positive were invited to follow-up examinations and HLA-DQB1 genotyping, and were followed for progression to Type 1 diabetes.
At first follow-up, 119 children had single and 36 children had multiple autoantibodies. Of the multiple autoantibody-positive children, 33 had at least one diabetes-associated HLA-DQB1 allele (*02 and/or *0302). A total of 26 children progressed to Type 1 diabetes, of whom 22 had multiple autoantibodies. The male-to-female ratio of those who progressed to Type 1 diabetes was 1.6. The positive predictive value of multiple autoantibodies was 61.1% compared with only 23.7% for diabetes-associated HLA-DQB1 genotypes among all those who were autoantibody-positive. The cumulative risk was 59.7% after 10 years and 75.1% after 18 years for children with multiple autoantibodies compared with 1.2 and 22.6%, respectively, for children with single autoantibodies (P<0.001). Among the three examined autoantibodies, insulinoma-associated antigen-2 antibodies conferred the highest risk.
The diabetes risk in schoolchildren with multiple autoantibodies was similar to the risk reported in other studies for genetically preselected probands; thus, a combined autoantibody-based screening could effectively identify at-risk individuals from the general population for future intervention trials.
调查普通学龄儿童群体中糖尿病相关自身抗体的发生情况以及18年间1型糖尿病的累积风险。
在卡尔斯堡1型糖尿病风险研究中,对来自德国东北部且无糖尿病家族史的11986名学龄儿童,通过放射性配体结合试验筛查谷氨酸脱羧酶抗体、胰岛瘤相关抗原2抗体和胰岛素自身抗体。那些自身抗体呈阳性的儿童被邀请进行随访检查和HLA - DQB1基因分型,并跟踪观察其向1型糖尿病的进展情况。
在首次随访时,119名儿童有单一自身抗体,36名儿童有多种自身抗体。在多种自身抗体呈阳性的儿童中,33名至少有一个与糖尿病相关的HLA - DQB1等位基因(02和/或0302)。共有26名儿童进展为1型糖尿病,其中22名有多种自身抗体。进展为1型糖尿病的儿童中男女比例为1.6。在所有自身抗体呈阳性的人群中,多种自身抗体的阳性预测值为61.1%,而与糖尿病相关的HLA - DQB1基因型的阳性预测值仅为23.7%。多种自身抗体的儿童10年后累积风险为59.7%,18年后为75.1%,相比之下,单一自身抗体的儿童分别为1.2%和22.6%(P<0.001)。在所检测的三种自身抗体中,胰岛瘤相关抗原2抗体的风险最高。
多种自身抗体的学龄儿童患糖尿病的风险与其他研究中报道的遗传预先选择的先证者的风险相似;因此,基于自身抗体的联合筛查可以有效地从普通人群中识别出有风险的个体,用于未来的干预试验。