BMJ 1994;308:1063-1068 (23 April)

Papers

Importance of persistent cellular and humoral immune changes before diabetes develops: prospective study of identical twins

R Y M Tun, M Peakman, L Alviggi, M J Hussain, S S S Lo, M Shattock, D A Pyke, G F Bottazzo, D Vergani, R D G Leslie 

Department of Diabetes and Metabolism, St bartholomew's Hospital, London EC1A 7BE Department of Immunology, King's College Hospital, London Department of Immunology, London Hospital Medical College, London Correspondence to: Dr Leslie.

Abstract

Objectives : To determine the pattern of cellular and humoral immune changes associated with insulin dependent diabetes before diabetes develops.
Design : Prospective study over 10 years of 25 non-diabetic indentical twins of patients with insulin dependent diabetes. The non-diabetic twins were followed up either till they developed diabetes or to the end of the study.
Setting : Teaching hospital.
Subjects : 25 non-diabetic identical cotwins of patients with diabetes; 46 controls of the same sex and similar age tested over the same period. Of the 25 twins (total follow up 144 patient years), 10 developed diabetes (prediabetic twins); the remainder were followed up for a mean of 7.7 years.
Main outcome measures : Results of glucose tolerance tests or fasting blood glucose concentrations at each sample point. Measurements of activated T lymphocytes, expressing the HLA-DR antigen, islet cell antibodies, and insulin authoantibodies in samples.
Results : All 10 prediabetic twins had both cellular and humoral changes initially and in most samples beofore diabetes was diagnosed (activated T lymphocytes in 39/40, islet cell antibodies in 45/47, and insulin authoantibodies to islet cells and insulin were detected infrequently (in 8/54, 6/69, and 0/69 samples, respectively). The combination of cellular and humoral (islet cell antibodies or insulin autoantibodies) immune changes were detected in all 10 of the prediabetic twins but in only one of the 15 nondiabetic twins (P<0.001). The positive predictive value in this cohort of increased percentages of activated T cells and the presence of antibodies to islet cells or insulin on two consecutive occasions was 100%.
Conclusion : Most of the twins had cellular or humoral immune changes at some stage. A combination of cellular and humoral immune changes and their tendency to persist is highly predictive of insulin dependent diabetes and distinguishes twins who develop diabetes from those who do not.

Clinical implications

  • Clinical implications

  • Many patients with insulin dependent diabetes show specific cellular and humoral immune changes - namely, activated T lymphocytes and antibodies to islet cells and insulin

  • This study examined these markers in 25 identical twins of diabetic patients according to whether they became diabetic themselves

  • Activated T lymphocytes and either islet cell or insulin antibodies were detected persistently in all 10 of the twins who became diabetic but on only one occasion in one of the 15 twins who did not

  • A combination of activated T lymphocytes and either islet cell or insulin antibodies predicts diabetes

  • Testing for islet cell antibodies would be a sensitive but not specific marker to identify people at risk in the general population


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This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Snieder, H., Sawtell, P. A., Ross, L., Walker, J., Spector, T. D., Leslie, R. D. G. (2001). HbA1c Levels Are Genetically Determined Even in Type 1 Diabetes: Evidence From Healthy and Diabetic Twins. Diabetes 50: 2858-2863 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Metcalfe, K. A., Hitman, G. A., Rowe, R. E., Hawa, M., Huang, X., Stewart, T., Leslie, R. D. G. (2001). Concordance for Type 1 Diabetes in Identical Twins Is Affected by Insulin Genotype. Diabetes Care 24: 838-842 [Abstract] [Full text]  



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