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Time-Resolved Autoantibody Profiling Facilitates Stratification of Preclinical Type 1 Diabetes in Children.
Citation | “Time-Resolved Autoantibody Profiling Facilitates Stratification Of Preclinical Type 1 Diabetes In Children.”. Diabetes, pp. 119-130. . |
Center | University of Washington |
Author | David Endesfelder, Wolfgang Zu Castell, Ezio Bonifacio, Marian Rewers, William A Hagopian, Jin-Xiong She, Åke Lernmark, Jorma Toppari, Kendra Vehik, Alistair J K Williams, Liping Yu, Beena Akolkar, Jeffrey P Krischer, Anette-G Ziegler, Peter Achenbach, Teddy Study Group |
Abstract |
Progression to clinical type 1 diabetes varies among children who develop β-cell autoantibodies. Differences in autoantibody patterns could relate to disease progression and etiology. Here we modeled complex longitudinal autoantibody profiles by using a novel wavelet-based algorithm. We identified clusters of similar profiles associated with various types of progression among 600 children from The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) birth cohort study; these children developed persistent insulin autoantibodies (IAA), GAD autoantibodies (GADA), insulinoma-associated antigen 2 autoantibodies (IA-2A), or a combination of these, and they were followed up prospectively at 3- to 6-month intervals (median follow-up 6.5 years). Children who developed multiple autoantibody types ( = 370) were clustered, and progression from seroconversion to clinical diabetes within 5 years ranged between clusters from 6% (95% CI 0, 17.4) to 84% (59.2, 93.6). Children who seroconverted early in life (median age <2 years) and developed IAA and IA-2A that were stable-positive on follow-up had the highest risk of diabetes, and this risk was unaffected by GADA status. Clusters of children who lacked stable-positive GADA responses contained more boys and lower frequencies of the HLA-DR3 allele. Our novel algorithm allows refined grouping of β-cell autoantibody-positive children who distinctly progressed to clinical type 1 diabetes, and it provides new opportunities in searching for etiological factors and elucidating complex disease mechanisms. |
Year of Publication |
2019
|
Journal |
Diabetes
|
Volume |
68
|
Issue |
1
|
Number of Pages |
119-130
|
Date Published |
12/2019
|
ISSN Number |
1939-327X
|
DOI |
10.2337/db18-0594
|
Alternate Journal |
Diabetes
|
PMID |
30305370
|
PMCID |
PMC6302536
|
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