Published in:
01-06-2015 | Original Article
Clinical features of slowly progressive type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus: a comparative study based on degree of obesity at diagnosis of diabetes
Authors:
Sari Hoshina, Junnosuke Miura, Eri Sugizawa, Kanako Shimura, Yasuko Uchigata
Published in:
Diabetology International
|
Issue 2/2015
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Abstract
Objective
For early differential diagnosis of slowly progressive type 1 diabetes mellitus (SPIDDM) from type 2 diabetes mellitus, we investigated clinical history and characteristics of patients with SPIDDM with or without obesity.
Research design and methods
Subjects were 39 patients (20 men and 19 women) diagnosed with SPIDDM based on positive antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) and/or islet-associated antigen 2 (IA-2), with more than 3 months from diabetes mellitus (DM) diagnosis to initiation of insulin therapy, and who were inpatients at our hospital between January 2004 and July 2010. Body mass index (BMI) before DM diagnosis, clinical characteristics at the time of DM diagnosis and SPIDDM diagnosis, and C-peptide levels at the time of DM diagnosis were extracted from medical records.
Results
The proportion of the patients with maximum BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2 was 67 % before DM diagnosis, 53 % at the time of DM diagnosis, and 25.6 % at the time of SPIDDM diagnosis, whereas those with BMI < 22 kg/m2 were 10.3, 25.0, and 59.0 %, respectively. Compared with patients with BMI < 22 kg/m2 at the time of DM diagnosis, those with BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2 had a significantly longer period from DM diagnosis to initiation of insulin therapy (p = 0.026); all of these patients had a C-peptide index (CPI) ≤ 1.0 at the time of SPIDDM diagnosis.
Conclusion
It is proposed that islet-specific autoantibodies should be measured in cases of obese patients with CPI ≤ 1.0 for earlier diagnosis of SPIDDM.