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Monogenic Diabetes in Children and Adolescents: Recognition and Treatment Options.

Citation
Sanyoura, M., et al. “Monogenic Diabetes In Children And Adolescents: Recognition And Treatment Options.”. Current Diabetes Reports, p. 58.
Center University of Chicago
Author May Sanyoura, Louis H Philipson, Rochelle Naylor
Keywords genetic testing, Maturity-onset diabetes of the young, Monogenic diabetes, Syndromic diabetes, type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes
Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We provide a review of monogenic diabetes in young children and adolescents with a focus on recognition, management, and pharmacological treatment.

RECENT FINDINGS: Monogenic forms of diabetes account for approximately 1-2% of diabetes in children and adolescents, and its incidence has increased in recent years due to greater awareness and wider availability of genetic testing. Monogenic diabetes is due to single gene defects that primarily affect beta cell function with more than 30 different genes reported. Children with antibody-negative, C-peptide-positive diabetes should be evaluated and genetically tested for monogenic diabetes. Accurate genetic diagnosis impacts treatment in the most common types of monogenic diabetes, including the use of sulfonylureas in place of insulin or other glucose-lowering agents or discontinuing pharmacologic treatment altogether. Diagnosis of monogenic diabetes can significantly improve patient care by enabling prediction of the disease course and guiding appropriate management and treatment.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Current diabetes reports
Volume
18
Issue
8
Number of Pages
58
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1539-0829
DOI
10.1007/s11892-018-1024-2
Alternate Journal
Curr. Diab. Rep.
PMID
29931562
PMCID
PMC6312113
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