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- Innate immune activity as a predictor of persistent insulin secretion and association with responsiveness to CTLA4-Ig treatment in recent-onset type 1 diabetes.
Innate immune activity as a predictor of persistent insulin secretion and association with responsiveness to CTLA4-Ig treatment in recent-onset type 1 diabetes.
Citation | “Innate Immune Activity As A Predictor Of Persistent Insulin Secretion And Association With Responsiveness To Ctla4-Ig Treatment In Recent-Onset Type 1 Diabetes.”. Diabetologia, pp. 2356-2370. . |
Center | University of Washington |
Author | Susanne M Cabrera, Samuel Engle, Mary Kaldunski, Shuang Jia, Rhonda Geoffrey, Pippa Simpson, Aniko Szabo, Cate Speake, Carla J Greenbaum, Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet CTLA4-Ig Study Group, Yi-Guang Chen, Martin J Hessner |
Keywords | biomarker, CTLA4-Ig, Disease heterogeneity, Honeymoon, Partial remission, Therapeutic response, type 1 diabetes |
Abstract |
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: The study aimed to determine whether discrete subtypes of type 1 diabetes exist, based on immunoregulatory profiles at clinical onset, as this has significant implications for disease treatment and prevention as well as the design and analysis of clinical trials. METHODS: Using a plasma-based transcriptional bioassay and a gene-ontology-based scoring algorithm, we examined local participants from the Children's Hospital of Wisconsin and conducted an ancillary analysis of TrialNet CTLA4-Ig trial (TN-09) participants. RESULTS: The inflammatory/regulatory balance measured during the post-onset period was highly variable. Notably, a significant inverse relationship was identified between baseline innate inflammatory activity and stimulated C-peptide AUC measured at 3, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months post onset among placebo-treated individuals (p ≤ 0.015). Further, duration of persistent insulin secretion was negatively related to baseline inflammation (p ≤ 0.012) and positively associated with baseline abundance of circulating activated regulatory T cells (CD4/CD45RA/FOXP3; p = 0.016). Based on these findings, data from participants treated with CTLA4-Ig were stratified by inflammatory activity at onset; in this way, we identified pathways and transcripts consistent with inhibition of T cell activation and enhanced immunoregulation. Variance among baseline plasma-induced signatures of TN-09 participants was further examined with weighted gene co-expression network analysis and related to clinical metrics. Four age-independent subgroups were identified that differed in terms of baseline innate inflammatory/regulatory bias, rate of C-peptide decline and response to CTLA4-Ig treatment. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: These data support the existence of multiple type 1 diabetes subtypes characterised by varying levels of baseline innate inflammation that are associated with the rate of C-peptide decline. DATA AVAILABILITY: Gene expression data files are publicly available through the National Center for Biotechnology Information Gene Expression Omnibus (accession number GSE102234). |
Year of Publication |
2018
|
Journal |
Diabetologia
|
Volume |
61
|
Issue |
11
|
Number of Pages |
2356-2370
|
Date Published |
12/2018
|
ISSN Number |
1432-0428
|
DOI |
10.1007/s00125-018-4708-x
|
Alternate Journal |
Diabetologia
|
PMID |
30167736
|
PMCID |
PMC6182660
|
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