Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults With Low-Titer GAD Antibodies: Similar Disease Progression With Type 2 Diabetes

Lingjiao Liu(Central South University), Xia Li(Central South University), Yufei Xiang(Central South University), Gan Huang(Central South University), Jian Lin(Central South University), Lin Yang(Central South University), Yunjuan Zhao(Central South University), Zhifang Yang(Central South University), Can Hou(Central South University), Yijun Li(Central South University), Jie Liu(Shanxi Medical University), Dalong Zhu(Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital), Richard David Leslie(Diabetes UK), Xiangbing Wang(Central South University), Zhiguang Zhou(Central South University)
Diabetes Care
October 21, 2014
Cited by 84

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study investigated the relationship between GAD autoantibody (GADA) titers and changing of β-cell function in patients with latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: This 3-year prospective study enrolled 95 subjects from 15 Chinese cities including 25 high-titer (GADA ≥180 units/mL) LADA patients, 42 low-titer (GADA <180 units/mL) LADA patients, and 28 type 2 diabetic patients, the latter two groups as controls of similar age, sex, and BMI. Clinical characteristics were determined annually, including glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), fasting C-peptide (FCP), and 2-h postprandial C-peptide (PCP). RESULTS: Despite similar initial FCP and PCP, FCP and PCP both decreased more in subjects with high GADA titer (FCP from mean 0.49 nmol/L at entry to 0.13 nmol/L at the third year; P < 0.05) than with low GADA titer (FCP from mean 0.48 to 0.38 nmol/L) and type 2 diabetes (FCP from mean 0.47 to 0.36 nmol/L); the latter two groups being similar. After 3 years, residual β-cell function (FCP >0.2 nmol/L) was detected in only 42% with an initial high GADA titer compared with 90% with a low GADA titer and 97% with type 2 diabetes (P < 0.01 for both). GADA positivity at the third year persisted more in subjects with initially high GADA (92%) than with low GADA (26%) titers (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: In selected LADA patients, initial GADA titers identified subjects with different degrees of persistent autoimmunity and disease progression. LADA patients with a low GADA titer had metabolic phenotypes and loss of β-cell function similar to type 2 diabetic patients.


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