The High Prevalence of Autoantibodies to Tissue Transglutaminase in First-Degree Relatives of Patients With Type 1 Diabetes Is Not Associated With Islet Autoimmunity
- Alistair J. K. Williams, BSC1,
- Alastair J. Norcross, BSC1,
- Robert J. Lock, MPHIL2,
- David J. Unsworth, PHD, FRCP2,
- Edwin A. M. Gale, FRCP1 and
- Polly J. Bingley, MD, FRCP1
- 1Diabetes and Metabolism Division of Medicine, University of Bristol, and the
- 2Department of Immunology, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, U.K.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—To determine the extent of celiac autoimmunity in type 1 diabetic patients and the overlap between islet and celiac autoimmunity in their nondiabetic relatives.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—IgA antibodies to tissue transglutaminase were determined in serum taken from 433 type 1 diabetic patients and 1,442 nondiabetic first-degree relatives. Samples with transglutaminase antibodies above the 97.5th percentile of 347 schoolchildren were also assayed for IgA anti-endomysial antibodies (EMAs). Markers of islet autoimmunity (islet cell antibodies and autoantibodies to insulin, glutamate decarboxylase, and protein tyrosine phosphatase IA-2) had previously been measured in all relatives.
RESULTS—In the absence of known celiac disease, the prevalence of transglutaminase antibody levels above the 97.5th percentile of the schoolchildren was 13.4% in diabetic patients and 7.0% in nondiabetic relatives. EMAs were found in addition to transglutaminase antibodies in 2.6% of probands and in 1.9% of first-degree relatives, but none of the schoolchildren. Transglutaminase antibodies were found to persist in 10 of 30 patients and in 30 of 59 relatives with follow-up samples taken at least 2 years after the initial sample. Of 186 nondiabetic relatives with islet autoantibodies, only 10 also had transglutaminase antibodies.
CONCLUSIONS—We found a high prevalence of celiac autoimmunity in patients and first-degree relatives of children with type 1 diabetes, but we found limited overlap between islet and celiac autoimmunity in nondiabetic relatives. The high prevalence of celiac autoimmunity may be explained by shared genetic susceptibility and identifies a population within which screening for the disease may be justified.
- EMA, anti-endomysial antibody
- ICA, islet cell antibody
- IDS, Immunology in Diabetes Society
- JDF, Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
- tTG, tissue transglutaminase
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Polly J. Bingley, Medical School Unit, Southmead Hospital, Bristol BS10 5NB, U.K. E-mail: polly.bingley{at}bristol.ac.uk.
Received for publication 12 September 2000 and accepted in revised form 8 December 2000.
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