- Home
- Featured Publications
- Center Publications
- Predicting progression to diabetes in islet autoantibody positive children.
Predicting progression to diabetes in islet autoantibody positive children.
Citation | “Predicting Progression To Diabetes In Islet Autoantibody Positive Children.”. Journal Of Autoimmunity, pp. 59-63. . |
Center | University of Colorado Denver |
Author | Andrea K Steck, Fran Dong, Brigitte I Frohnert, Kathleen Waugh, Michelle Hoffman, Jill M Norris, Marian J Rewers |
Keywords | islet autoimmunity, Oral glucose tolerance test, Predictors for diabetes, Progression to diabetes, type 1 diabetes |
Abstract |
While full oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) helps improve prediction, it requires intravenous access with 6 sample collections for glucose and C-peptide. The objective of this study was to explore less costly and less time-consuming options. All children being prospectively followed by the Diabetes Autoimmunity Study in the Young (DAISY) who had a complete baseline OGTT and at least one confirmed islet autoantibody (Ab+) were included in this study (n = 68). Of 68 Ab+ subjects with a baseline OGTT, 25 developed diabetes after a mean follow-up 5.7 yrs, at a mean age of 12.4 yrs. Univariate proportional hazards (PH) models suggested that age at seroconversion, number of Ab+, IA-2A levels, HbA1c and metabolic variables from the OGTT predicted progression to diabetes, while HLA DR3/4, BMI, levels of IAA or GADA did not. Five multivariate PH predictive models were similar (p = 0.32). All five models included age at seroconversion, number of Ab+, IA-2A levels and HbA1c, and in addition included: model 1 - 1 h glucose and 1 h C-peptide; model 2 - 2 h glucose and 2 h C-peptide; model 3 - glucose sum and C-peptide sum; model 4 - glucose AUC and C-peptide AUC; and model 5: index 60. A model containing age at seroconversion, number of Ab+, IA-2A levels, HbA1c, 1 h glucose and 1 h C-peptide was as predictive for type 1 diabetes progression as models including all sum or AUC values for glucose and C-peptide from full OGTT. The performance of this model should be confirmed in an independent population of Ab+ children. |
Year of Publication |
2018
|
Journal |
Journal of autoimmunity
|
Volume |
90
|
Number of Pages |
59-63
|
Date Published |
12/2018
|
ISSN Number |
1095-9157
|
DOI |
10.1016/j.jaut.2018.01.006
|
Alternate Journal |
J. Autoimmun.
|
PMID |
29395739
|
PMCID |
PMC5949243
|
Download citation |