Routine Islet Autoantibody Testing in Clinically Diagnosed Adult-Onset Type 1 Diabetes Can Help Identify Misclassification and the Possibility of Successful Insulin Cessation

Russell J. Eason,Nicholas J. Thomas,Anita V. Hill,Bridget A. Knight,Alice Carr,Andrew T. Hattersley, Timothy J. McDonald,Beverley M. Shields,Angus G. Jones, Godwin Simon, Angelo Ramos, Andrea Norris, Kai Tan,Parth Narendran, Shenaz Ramtoola,Amar Ali,Moulinath Banerjee,Augustin Brooks,Ali Chakera,Andrew Johnson,Danijela Tatovic, Chitrabhanu Ballav,Colin Dayan,Sunil Nair,Frances Game,Angus Jones, Susan Beames,Gerry Rayman, Marie Snell, Susie Butler, Sarah Beck, Janet Beecham,John Wilding,Sam Rice, Mimi Chen, Athinyaa Thiraviaraj, Siva Sivappriyan,Basil Issa, Asif Humayun,Rebecca Hinch, Leena Krishnan, Khin Swe Myint,Charles Fox, Jennifer Prouten,Mike Sampson,Peter Mansell, Carolyn Chee,Katharine Owen, Ioannis Dimitropoulis,Michael Cummings, Foteini Kavourra,Adrian Heald,Simon Heller, Sarbpreet Sihota, Vakkat Muraleedharan, Tara Watson,Hermione Price, Roger Whittaker, Sarah Orme, Ben Field,Stephen Bain, Beas Battacharya, Lesley Haxton, Suzannah Pegler,Catherine Thompson, Rob Andrew, Jamie Smith, Duncan Browne, Steve Creely, Rahul Yadav, Rakhi Kakad, Ken Laji,Mohit Kumar, Alirezi Mohammadi, James Young, Seshadri Pramodh, Vijay Jayagopal

Diabetes Care(2022)

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摘要
OBJECTIVE Recent joint American Diabetes Association and European Association for the Study of Diabetes guidelines recommend routine islet autoantibody testing in all adults newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. We aimed to assess the impact of routine islet autoantibody testing in this population. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We prospectively assessed the relationship between islet autoantibody status (GADA, IA-2A, and ZNT8A), clinical and genetic characteristics, and progression (annual change in urine C-peptide–to–creatinine ratio [UCPCR]) in 722 adults (≥18 years old at diagnosis) with clinically diagnosed type 1 diabetes and diabetes duration <12 months. We also evaluated changes in treatment and glycemia over 2 years after informing participants and their clinicians of autoantibody results. RESULTS Of 722 participants diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, 24.8% (179) were autoantibody negative. This group had genetic and C-peptide characteristics suggestive of a high prevalence of nonautoimmune diabetes: lower mean type 1 diabetes genetic risk score (islet autoantibody negative vs. positive: 10.85 vs. 13.09 [P < 0.001] [type 2 diabetes 10.12]) and lower annual change in C-peptide (UCPCR), −24% vs. −43% (P < 0.001). After median 24 months of follow-up, treatment change occurred in 36.6% (60 of 164) of autoantibody-negative participants: 22.6% (37 of 164) discontinued insulin, with HbA1c similar to that of participants continuing insulin (57.5 vs. 60.8 mmol/mol [7.4 vs. 7.7%], P = 0.4), and 14.0% (23 of 164) added adjuvant agents to insulin. CONCLUSIONS In adult-onset clinically diagnosed type 1 diabetes, negative islet autoantibodies should prompt careful consideration of other diabetes subtypes. When routinely measured, negative antibodies are associated with successful insulin cessation. These findings support recent recommendations for routine islet autoantibody assessment in adult-onset type 1 diabetes.
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关键词
insulin,diabetes,adult-onset
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