Prevalence, Characteristics and Diabetes Risk Associated with Transient Maternally Acquired Islet Antibodies and Persistent Islet Antibodies in Offspring of Parents with Type 1 Diabetes
Accurate assessment of type 1 diabetes risk in young children requires discrimination between antibodies that are pro- duced by the child and antibodies acquired through the pla- centa from an islet antibody-positive mother. We studied 682 offspring from mothers with type 1 diabetes and 329 offspring from fathers with type 1 diabetes and nondiabetic mothers for insulin (auto)antibodies, glutamic acid decarboxylase anti- bodies, and tyrosine phosphatase IA-2 antibodies before age 1 yr and again at age 2 yr to ascertain transience or persistence. Antibodies were detected at age 9 months in 5 (1.5%) offspring from fathers with type 1 diabetes; all were insulin (auto)- antibodies only, all persisted and developed multiple antibod- ies, and 1 developed type 1 diabetes. In contrast, 31 (4.5%) offspring from mothers with type 1 diabetes had antibodies at 9 months; 12 (1.8%) persisted at age 2 yr, and 19 (2.8%) did not persist, suggestive of transient residual maternal antibodies. Multiple antibodies at 9 months were usually persistent (3 of 4 offspring), as were single insulin (auto)antibodies in off- spring from mothers with type 1 diabetes (8 of 13 offspring), whereas persistent glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies (1 of 12) and tyrosine phosphatase IA-2 antibodies (0 of 2) were rare. Offspring with persistent antibodies at age 9 months had a high type 1 diabetes risk (100% by age 5 yr for those with multiple antibodies and 27% for single antibodies at 9 months), whereas offspring with transient antibodies had 0% type 1 diabetes risk (P < 0.01). Transience was associated with very high antibody levels at birth. For insulin (auto)antibod- ies, the measurement of subclass was also informative. Resid- ual maternal antibody was indicated by similar insulin (au- to)antibodies subclasses at 9 months and at birth, whereas different subclasses were indicative of nonmaternal antibody. Moreover, the presence of IgG1-insulin (auto)antibodies was associated with antibody persistence and type 1 diabetes risk. These strategies are helpful in discriminating high and low risk antibodies before age 1 yr and should be important for prognosis and reducing unnecessary parent anxiety. (J Clin Endocrinol Metab 86: 4826 - 4833, 2001)