Wadivkar Pradnyashree, Thomas Nihal, Jebasingh Felix, Bacot-Davis Valjean Raiden, Maini Rohan, Hawkins Meredith
Global Diabetes Institute, Diabetes Research Center, Department of Endocrinology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, United States.
Department of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India.
Physiology (Bethesda). 2025 Sep 1;40(5):0. doi: 10.1152/physiol.00065.2024. Epub 2025 Mar 6.
Early-life undernutrition is known to be a potentially important risk factor for the development of diabetes mellitus in adult life. Additionally, some literature suggests that undernutrition during later life or adulthood may lead to metabolic consequences, including diabetes, despite an individual's normal nutritional status earlier in life. Notably, individuals with diabetes and undernutrition show some unique features that do not fit the usual phenotype of type 2 diabetes mellitus, such as a low body mass index of <18.5 kg/m, resistance to ketosis, and low serum C-peptide levels. Many global descriptions of this unique phenotype have led to a controversy that "undernutrition-associated diabetes mellitus" is a distinct form of diabetes, deserving a separate diabetes category in the WHO classification of diabetes. However, a few investigators argue that undernutrition-associated diabetes mellitus is one of the variants of the classical forms of diabetes. The second controversy is whether adult undernutrition is independently associated with metabolic abnormalities. Its pathophysiology has been difficult to determine, given confounding factors such as infections that can complicate the direct effects of malnutrition. Studies have shown that insulin deficiency due to pancreatic β-cell impairment is likely to contribute to the development of undernutrition-associated diabetes. To examine these controversies, further research is warranted to understand the role of undernutrition in the pathogenesis of undernutrition-associated diabetes. This review aims to shed more light on these controversies, focusing on whether diabetes in malnourished individuals represents a distinct diabetes category and the association between malnutrition and diabetes in adults.
众所周知,生命早期营养不良是成年后患糖尿病的一个潜在重要风险因素。此外,一些文献表明,尽管个体在生命早期营养状况正常,但晚年或成年期的营养不良可能会导致包括糖尿病在内的代谢后果。值得注意的是,患有糖尿病和营养不良的个体表现出一些不符合2型糖尿病常见表型的独特特征,如体重指数低于18.5kg/m²、对酮症有抵抗力以及血清C肽水平较低。对这种独特表型的许多全球描述引发了一场争议,即“营养不良相关性糖尿病”是一种独特的糖尿病形式,在世卫组织糖尿病分类中应单独列为一类糖尿病。然而,一些研究人员认为,营养不良相关性糖尿病是经典糖尿病形式的变体之一。第二个争议是成人营养不良是否与代谢异常独立相关。鉴于感染等混杂因素会使营养不良的直接影响变得复杂,其病理生理学一直难以确定。研究表明,胰腺β细胞损伤导致的胰岛素缺乏可能促成了营养不良相关性糖尿病的发生。为了探讨这些争议,有必要进行进一步研究以了解营养不良在营养不良相关性糖尿病发病机制中的作用。本综述旨在更清楚地阐明这些争议,重点关注营养不良个体的糖尿病是否代表一种独特的糖尿病类别以及成人营养不良与糖尿病之间的关联。