Symposium 12:Heterogeneity of diabetes type 2: proposals to redefine it
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47196/diab.v56i3Sup.577Keywords:
diabetes mellitus, detectionAbstract
Diabetes is the fastest increasing disease worldwide. Existing treatment strategies have been unable to stop the progressive course of the disease and prevent development of chronic complications. One explanation for these shortcomings is that diagnosis of diabetes is based on measurement of only one metabolite, glucose, but the disease is heterogeneous with regard to clinical presentation and progression.
The distinction between the two types has historically been based on age at onset, degree of loss of β cell function, degree of insulin resistance, presence of diabetes-associated autoantibodies, and requirement for insulin treatment for survival. However, none of these characteristics unequivocally distinguishes one type of diabetes from the other, nor accounts for the entire spectrum of diabetes phenotypes. Thus, the phenotypes of T1DM and T2DM are becoming less distinctive with an increasing prevalence of obesity at a young age, recognition of the relatively high proportion of incident cases of T1DM in adulthood and the occurrence of T2DM in young people. Also, developments in molecular genetics have allowed clinicians to identify growing numbers of subtypes of diabetes.
References
I. Classification and diagnosis of diabetes. Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes 2022 Diabetes Care 2022;45(Suppl. 1):S17-S38. doi: 10.2337/dc22-S002.
II. Ahlqvist E, Storm P, Käräjämäki A, et al. Novel subgroups of adult-onset diabetes and their association with outcomes: a data-driven cluster analysis of six variables. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol 2018;6:361-369.
III. Tuomi T, Santoro N, Caprio S, Cai M, Weng J, Groop L. The many faces of diabetes: a disease with increasing heterogeneity. Lancet 2014;383:1084-1094.
IV. Adler A, Bennett P, Colagiuri Chair S, Gregg E, Venkat-Narayan K, et al.Classification of diabetes mellitus. Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice 2021. doi: 10.1016/j.diabres. 2021.108972.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 on behalf of the authors. Reproduction rights: Argentine Diabetes Society
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Dirección Nacional de Derecho de Autor, Exp. N° 5.333.129. Instituto Nacional de la Propiedad Industrial, Marca «Revista de la Sociedad Argentina de Diabetes - Asociación Civil» N° de concesión 2.605.405 y N° de disposición 1.404/13.
La Revista de la SAD está licenciada bajo Licencia Creative Commons Atribución – No Comercial – Sin Obra Derivada 4.0 Internacional.
Por otra parte, la Revista SAD permite que los autores mantengan los derechos de autor sin restricciones.