Abstract
Objective: Mutations in the KCNJ11 and ABCC8 genes that encode the pancreatic K ATP channel are the commonest cause of permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus (PNDM). The authors aimed to define the genetic causes of PNDM in a large cohort of Arab patients and compare them with a British cohort tested in the same laboratory. Design: Retrospective observational study. Setting: International genetics centre. Patients: Arab and British subjects with PNDM who were referred for genetic testing over the same period. Intervention: Comparison of genotypes and phenotypes between the two cohorts. Main outcome measures: The aetiology and phenotype of PNDM in an Arab compared to a British cohort. Results: 88 Arab and 77 British probands were referred between 2006 and 2011, inclusive. Consanguinity was higher among Arabs (63.6% vs 10.4%) and a higher percentage had a genetic diagnosis compared to the British cohort (63.6% vs 41.6%). Recessive EIF2AK3 gene mutations were the commonest cause of PNDM in the Arab cohort (22.7%) followed by INS (12.5%), and KCNJ11 and GCK (5.7% each), whereas K ATP channel mutations were the commonest cause (29.9%) in the British cohort. In 37.5% of Arab patients PNDM was part of a genetic syndrome compared to 7.8% of the British cohort. Conclusion: PNDM in the Arab population has a different genetic spectrum compared to British patients where KATP channel mutations are the commonest cause, similar to other European populations. In Arabs, PNDM is more likely to be part of a recessively inherited syndrome, possibly due to the higher rate of consanguinity.
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CITATION STYLE
Habeb, A. M., Flanagan, S. E., Deeb, A., Al-Alwan, I., Alawneh, H., Balafrej, A. A. L., … Ellard, S. (2012). Permanent neonatal diabetes: Different aetiology in Arabs compared to Europeans. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 97(8), 721–723. https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2012-301744
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