2A-SS2-10

PREDICTION AND PREVENTION OF TYPE 1 DIABETES

M. Knip

Hospital for Children and Adolescents, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

 

       Clinical type 1 diabetes represents end-stage insulitis resulting from progressive beta-cell destruction. The knowledge that the clinical manifestation of diabetes is preceded by an asymptomatic phase that may last for years, and recent advances in our ability to identify individuals at increased risk of clinical disease have paved the way for trials aimed at preventing or delaying the clinical onset of type 1 diabetes. Individuals at increased disease risk can be identified by a positive family history, or by genetic, immunological and/or metabolic markers. As long as there is no effective preventive modality available for clinical use, screening for high-risk individuals can be considered ethically acceptable only in the context of sound research protocols. Among the predictive tools available, the combination of various diabetes-associated autoantibodies seems to provide a high positive predictive value (PPV) in first-degree relatives, with a satisfactory sensitivity. The combination of antibodies may also result in a relatively high PPV in the background population, but there are data indicating that the most cost-effective screening approach for the general population is the combination of genetic and autoimmune markers.

       Prevention of type 1 diabetes can be implemented at three different levels. Primary prevention comprises all strategies aimed at decreasing the incidence of the disease by reducing the risk of developing diabetes, and targets subjects without any sign of beta-cell damage. The objective of secondary prevention is to reduce the incidence of diabetes by stopping ongoing beta-cell destruction. Tertiary prevention can be initiated after the clinical manifestation of diabetes, and it aims at restoring beta-cell function or at preventing secondary complications of the disease. At present, one primary prevention and three comprehensive secondary prevention trials are in progress. Common features of the intervention trials are that the recruitment of subjects fulfilling the inclusion criteria is time-consuming, and the trials have to last for a long time, as long as clinical disease is the endpoint. The ongoing prevention trials may, however, represent a new era of type 1 diabetes - the beginning of the end of this complicated disease.