Type 1 diabetes in Africa: an immunogenetic study in the Amhara of North-West Ethiopia
Aims/hypothesis We aimed to characterise the immunogenic background of insulin-dependent diabetes in a resource-poor rural African community. The study was initiated because reports of low autoantibody prevalence and phenotypic differences from European-origin cases with type 1 diabetes have raised...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Diabetologia 2020-10, Vol.63 (10), p.2158-2168 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Aims/hypothesis
We aimed to characterise the immunogenic background of insulin-dependent diabetes in a resource-poor rural African community. The study was initiated because reports of low autoantibody prevalence and phenotypic differences from European-origin cases with type 1 diabetes have raised doubts as to the role of autoimmunity in this and similar populations.
Methods
A study of consecutive, unselected cases of recently diagnosed, insulin-dependent diabetes (
n
= 236, ≤35 years) and control participants (
n
= 200) was carried out in the ethnic Amhara of rural North-West Ethiopia. We assessed their demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, and measured non-fasting C-peptide, diabetes-associated autoantibodies and
HLA-DRB1
alleles. Leveraging genome-wide genotyping, we performed both a principal component analysis and, given the relatively modest sample size, a provisional genome-wide association study. Type 1 diabetes genetic risk scores were calculated to compare their genetic background with known European type 1 diabetes determinants.
Results
Patients presented with stunted growth and low BMI, and were insulin sensitive; only 15.3% had diabetes onset at ≤15 years. C-peptide levels were low but not absent. With clinical diabetes onset at ≤15, 16–25 and 26–35 years, 86.1%, 59.7% and 50.0% were autoantibody positive, respectively. Most had autoantibodies to GAD (GADA) as a single antibody; the prevalence of positivity for autoantibodies to IA-2 (IA-2A) and ZnT8 (ZnT8A) was low in all age groups. Principal component analysis showed that the Amhara genomes were distinct from modern European and other African genomes.
HLA-DRB1*03:01
(
p
= 0.0014) and
HLA-DRB1*04
(
p
= 0.0001) were positively associated with this form of diabetes, while
HLA-DRB1*15
was protective (
p
|
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ISSN: | 0012-186X 1432-0428 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00125-020-05229-x |