Abstract
Antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) are a useful autoimmune marker for type 1 diabetes mellitus in Caucasians. We examined antibodies to GAD and their relationships with clinical features and pancreatic β cell function in 140 young Chinese diabetic patients. Over an 18-month period beginning in 1995, 140 young Chinese diabetic subjects with age of onset of disease ≤ 35 years and age < 40 years were recruited consecutively, irrespective of their modes of presentation. Clinical features, antibodies to GAD and pancreatic β cell function (using a glucagon stimulation test) were examined. Increased levels of antibodies to GAD (> 18 units) were detected in 12.1% (n = 17) of these subjects. Forty-three (31%) patients had a classical type 1 presentation and 65 (46%) patients were insulin-deficient based on post-glucagon plasma C-peptide levels. Patients who were insulin-deficient and had a type 1 presentation had the highest prevalence of antibodies to GAD (29.0%) compared with patients who had a type 2 presentation and were non-insulin deficient (6.4%, P = 0.003). Patients who had antibodies to GAD had lower body mass index and waist-hip ratio, earlier onset of disease, lower blood pressure, plasma triglyceride and C-peptide, and higher concentrations of plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and glycated haemoglobin, and were more likely to require drug treatment, compared with those without antibodies to GAD. In conclusion, there was a low prevalence of antibodies to GAD in Chinese young diabetic patients although such antibodies remained a relatively specific marker for insulin deficiency and acute presentation. Causes other than autoimmunity should be sought to explain the high prevalence of insulin deficiency in these young Chinese patients.
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Ko, G. T. C., Chan, J. C. N., Yeung, V. T. F., Chow, C. C., Li, J. K. Y., Lau, M. S. W., … Cockram, C. S. (1998). Antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase in young Chinese diabetic patients. Annals of Clinical Biochemistry, 35(6), 761–767. https://doi.org/10.1177/000456329803500609
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