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Differentiation of Diabetes by Pathophysiology, Natural History, and Prognosis.
Citation | “Differentiation Of Diabetes By Pathophysiology, Natural History, And Prognosis.”. Diabetes, pp. 241-255. . |
Center | University of Washington |
Author | Jay S Skyler, George L Bakris, Ezio Bonifacio, Tamara Darsow, Robert H Eckel, Leif Groop, Per-Henrik Groop, Yehuda Handelsman, Richard A Insel, Chantal Mathieu, Allison T McElvaine, Jerry P Palmer, Alberto Pugliese, Desmond A Schatz, Jay M Sosenko, John P H Wilding, Robert E Ratner |
Abstract |
The American Diabetes Association, JDRF, the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists convened a research symposium, "The Differentiation of Diabetes by Pathophysiology, Natural History and Prognosis" on 10-12 October 2015. International experts in genetics, immunology, metabolism, endocrinology, and systems biology discussed genetic and environmental determinants of type 1 and type 2 diabetes risk and progression, as well as complications. The participants debated how to determine appropriate therapeutic approaches based on disease pathophysiology and stage and defined remaining research gaps hindering a personalized medical approach for diabetes to drive the field to address these gaps. The authors recommend a structure for data stratification to define the phenotypes and genotypes of subtypes of diabetes that will facilitate individualized treatment. |
Year of Publication |
2017
|
Journal |
Diabetes
|
Volume |
66
|
Issue |
2
|
Number of Pages |
241-255
|
Date Published |
12/2017
|
ISSN Number |
1939-327X
|
DOI |
10.2337/db16-0806
|
Alternate Journal |
Diabetes
|
PMID |
27980006
|
PMCID |
PMC5384660
|
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