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Original Research

The Application of the Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 Risk Score for Identifying a Preclinical State of Type 1 Diabetes

  1. Jay M. Sosenko, MD1⇓,
  2. Jay S. Skyler, MD1,
  3. Jeffrey Mahon, MD2,
  4. Jeffrey P. Krischer, PHD3,
  5. Craig A. Beam, PHD3,
  6. David C. Boulware, MS3,
  7. Carla J. Greenbaum, MD4,
  8. Lisa E. Rafkin, MS1,
  9. Catherine Cowie, PHD5,
  10. David Cuthbertson, MS6,
  11. Jerry P. Palmer, MD7 and
  12. the Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet and Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 Study Groups
  1. 1Division of Endocrinology, University of Miami, Miami, Florida
  2. 2Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
  3. 3Division of Informatics and Biostatistics, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida
  4. 4Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason, Seattle, Washington
  5. 5National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
  6. 6Pediatrics Epidemiology Center, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida
  7. 7VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Nutrition, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
  1. Corresponding author: Jay M. Sosenko, jsosenko{at}med.miami.edu.
Diabetes Care 2012 Jul; 35(7): 1552-1555. https://doi.org/10.2337/dc12-0011
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE We assessed the utility of the Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 Risk Score (DPTRS) for identifying individuals who are highly likely to progress to type 1 diabetes (T1D) within 2 years.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS The DPTRS was previously developed from Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 (DPT-1) data and was subsequently validated in the TrialNet Natural History Study (TNNHS). DPTRS components included C-peptide and glucose indexes from oral glucose tolerance testing, along with age and BMI. The cumulative incidence of T1D was determined after DPTRS thresholds were first exceeded and after the first occurrences of glucose abnormalities.

RESULTS The 2-year risks after the 9.00 DPTRS threshold was exceeded were 0.88 and 0.77 in DPT-1 (n = 90) and the TNNHS (n = 69), respectively. In DPT-1, the 2-year risks were much lower after dysglycemia first occurred (0.37; n = 306) and after a 2-h glucose value between 190 and 199 mg/dL was first reached (0.64; n = 59). Among those who developed T1D in DPT-1, the 9.00 threshold was exceeded 0.81 ± 0.53 years prior to the conventional diagnosis. Postchallenge C-peptide levels were substantially higher (P = 0.001 for 30 min; P < 0.001 for other time points) when the 9.00 threshold was first exceeded compared with the levels at diagnosis.

CONCLUSIONS A DPTRS threshold of 9.00 identifies individuals who are very highly likely to progress to the conventional diagnosis of T1D within 2 years and, thus, are essentially in a preclinical diabetic state. The 9.00 threshold is exceeded well before diagnosis, when stimulated C-peptide levels are substantially higher.

Current diagnostic glucose thresholds for clinical type 1 diabetes (T1D) are based on the levels at which diabetes complications begin to occur; moreover, they are the same for type 2 diabetes (1). Yet it is known that the pathogenetic development of T1D begins well before those thresholds are reached. Pancreatic autoantibodies are commonly present a number of years before diagnosis (2–4). In addition, glucose, insulin, and C-peptide abnormalities are commonly present years before diagnosis (5–8). However, as yet, there has not been a means to identify individuals who will almost certainly be diagnosed within a few years.

A risk score (DPTRS) for T1D has been developed from Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 (DPT-1) participants, all islet cell autoantibody positive, which utilizes oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) glucose and C-peptide values, age, and BMI (9). The DPTRS was subsequently validated in the TrialNet Natural History Study (TNNHS), a separate cohort of biochemical autoantibody-positive individuals (10).

The strong prediction accuracy of the DPTRS suggested the possibility that it could be used to detect a preclinical state prior to the diagnosis of T1D. Thus, in both the DPT-1 and TNNHS cohorts, we have sought to detect a DPTRS threshold that might identify individuals at a sufficiently high 2-year risk for T1D to warrant the characterization of their being in a preclinical state. In addition, we have assessed the metabolic status of those individuals when such a threshold was exceeded.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS

The DPT-1 and TNNHS cohorts have been previously described (5,6). They both consisted of autoantibody-positive relatives of T1D patients. However, whereas the DPT-1 participants were all islet cell autoantibody positive, the TNNHS participants were all positive for at least one biochemical autoantibody (GADA, IA-2A, mIAA). Both DPT-1 and the TNNHS were approved by institutional review boards, and written informed consent was obtained for both studies.

Procedures

In both DPT-1 and the TNNHS, 2-h OGTTs were performed at 6-month intervals. Oral glucose was administered after fasting samples were obtained (1.75 g/kg; maximum, 75 g carbohydrate). Glucose samples were then obtained at 30, 60, 90, and 120 min. A diabetic range OGTT (by American Diabetes Association criteria) was followed by a confirmatory OGTT unless the clinical presentation (symptomatic or marked hyperglycemia) was indicative of the diagnosis. If an OGTT was not confirmed, participants were then followed in the routine manner. Diagnoses could also be made between visits according to clinical criteria.

Laboratory measures

The glucose oxidase method was used for plasma glucose measurements. A radioimmunoassay was used to measure C-peptide in DPT-1. If fasting C-peptide values were in the undetectable range (<0.2 ng/mL), they were assigned a value of 0.1 ng/mL. The methodologies for assessing autoantibody positivity in DPT-1 have been described (11); those same methodologies were used in the TNNHS.

Data analysis

The development of the DPTRS from DPT-1 data (9) and its validation in the TNNHS (10) has been described previously. In brief, the DPTRS is based on a proportional hazards model. The components of the DPTRS are age, log BMI, log fasting C-peptide, and the glucose and C-peptide sums of 30-, 60-, 90-, and 120-min values from OGTTs. Dysglycemia was defined by any of the following: fasting glucose 110–125 mg/dL; 30-, 60-, or 90-min glucose ≥200 mg/dL; 120-min glucose 140–199 mg/dL. Follow-up was calculated from when DPTRS thresholds were first exceeded. Some of the analyses were performed only with DPT-1 data since the numbers of those who exceeded thresholds during follow-up were larger. If a BMI measurement was not obtained at a visit, the measurement obtained at the prior visit (if within 9 months) was used. Paired t tests were used to examine differences. Proportional hazards regression was used for risk prediction. Kaplan-Meier curves were calculated to describe the occurrence of T1D. Analyses were performed with the SAS 9.1.3 and SAS 9.2 versions. P values are two-sided, and P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

RESULTS

The mean ± SD ages of the 674 DPT-1 and 1,202 TNNHS participants from whom the analyses were derived were 13.8 ± 9.5 and 18.3 ± 13.4 years, respectively.

There were 7 (1.0%) participants in DPT-1 and 14 (1.2%) in the TNNHS who had already exceeded the 9.00 DPTRS threshold at baseline and were therefore excluded from further analysis. Figure 1 shows cumulative incidence curves after the 9.00 threshold was first exceeded in DPT-1 (T1D/Total = 78/90) and the TNNHS (T1D/Total = 40/69). The curves were similar with 2-year risk estimates of 0.88 (95% CI 0.79–0.94) for DPT-1 and 0.77 (0.63–0.99) for the TNNHS. Only 3 of those not diagnosed in DPT-1 and 1 of those not diagnosed in the TNNHS were followed for >3.0 years. The 2-year estimates after the 8.75 DPTRS threshold was first exceeded were 0.82 (0.74–0.89) in DPT-1 (n = 115) and 0.70 (0.56–0.83) in the TNNHS (n = 75). When a threshold of 8.00 was exceeded, the 2-year estimates were lower but still >0.50 in both cohorts (0.73 [0.65–0.80] in DPT-1 and 0.54 [0.43–0.66] in the TNNHS). The numbers exceeding that threshold were appreciably greater (n = 173 in DPT-1 and n = 114 in the TNNHS) than the numbers exceeding the higher thresholds.

Figure 1
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Figure 1

Cumulative incidence curves after the 9.00 DPTRS threshold was first exceeded in DPT-1 and the TNNHS. The occurrence of T1D was substantial in both cohorts, and the curves were similar.

Figure 2 shows cumulative incidence curves of DPT-1 participants after dysglycemia first occurred (n = 306) and after a 2-h glucose value between 190 and 199 mg/dL was first reached (n = 59). (That interval was chosen to identify individuals with marked postchallenge hyperglycemia.) The curve after exceeding the 9.00 threshold is again shown for comparison. The cumulative incidence was much higher after exceeding the 9.00 DPTRS threshold (2-year risk 0.88 [95% CI 0.79–0.94]; n = 90) than the cumulative incidence after dysglycemia first occurred (2-year risk 0.37 [0.31–0.44]; n = 306). The cumulative incidence was also substantially higher after exceeding the 9.00 threshold than after a 190–199 mg/dL 2-h value was reached (2-year risk 0.64 [0.53–0.80]; n = 59). The 2-year risk for the 9.00 threshold was still appreciably higher (0.80 [0.67–0.89]; n = 59) even with the exclusion of those who had exceeded that threshold with diabetic range OGTTs that were not confirmed by a second OGTT.

Figure 2
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Figure 2

Cumulative incidence curves after the 9.00 DPTRS threshold was first exceeded, after dysglycemia first occurred, and after the 2-h glucose value between 190 and 199 mg/dL was first reached in the DPT-1 participants. The cumulative incidence for the 9.00 threshold was much greater than that for dysglycemia and even appreciably higher than that for the 190–199 mg/dL 2-h glucose.

Among the 44 participants with complete OGTTs at diagnosis, the 9.00 DPTRS threshold was first exceeded 0.81 ± 0.53 years earlier than at diagnosis (P < 0.001). Figure 3 shows C-peptide levels according to the time the 9.00 threshold was first exceeded and at diagnosis for those individuals. All postchallenge C-peptide levels were substantially higher (P = 0.001 for 30 min; P < 0.001 for other time points) when the 9.00 DPTRS threshold was first exceeded compared with the levels at diagnosis. Fasting C-peptide values were similar.

Figure 3
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Figure 3

Paired comparisons between C-peptide levels when the 9.00 DPTRS threshold was first exceeded and C-peptide levels at diagnosis in the DPT-1 participants. C-peptide levels were higher at all postchallenge time points.

CONCLUSIONS

The data in this report strongly suggest that a selected DPTRS threshold can be used as a marker that is firmly indicative of a preclinical state. In both the DPT-1 and TNNHS cohorts, those who exceeded the 9.00 threshold had a very high likelihood of progressing to T1D within 2 years. They were identified on average >9 months before the standard diagnosis, when stimulated C-peptide levels were considerably higher.

To gain perspective, the risk of T1D after the 9.00 DPTRS threshold was exceeded was compared with the risk of T1D after dysglycemia first occurred. Dysglycemia has been used to identify individuals at high risk for T1D (5). The substantially higher risk after exceeding the 9.00 threshold emphasizes the magnitude of the risk for individuals above that threshold.

OGTT surveillance was a key factor for identifying those at very high risk for T1D. Many more were found to be above the 9.00 threshold during follow-up than at baseline. (The number that exceeded the 9.00 threshold is almost certainly an underestimation since missing BMI values on certain visits precluded the calculation of the DPTRS.) Thus, through OGTT surveillance, DPTRS thresholds identify individuals who are at very high risk before they develop clinical signs and symptoms. Since it would not be feasible to perform OGTT surveillance on large numbers of individuals, the use of DPTRS thresholds for the detection of a preclinical T1D state is applicable to only higher-risk populations that might warrant such surveillance (e.g., those positive for autoantibodies).

DPTRS thresholds have potential utility as entry criteria for prevention trials of very high-risk individuals. C-peptide levels would be much higher in those individuals than in those entered into new-onset trials (12–14). Importantly, the identification of individuals at very high short-term risk would affect the risk-benefit considerations for children in prevention trials. Alternatively, a high DPTRS threshold could be used in T1D prevention trials for interim analyses or as an end point that is adjunctive to the current diagnostic criteria. Our use of the term preclinical type 1 diabetes stems from the very high risk of a subsequent diagnosis of T1D for those exceeding the 9.00 threshold. Although T1D might not necessarily be an inevitable outcome in these individuals, the risk is so high that it is reasonable to view them as being in a prediabetic state.

T1D predictors have been reported in several studies (9,10,15–18). However, although individuals could be characterized as being at high risk, studies have not identified such individuals within a time frame of 2 years. The specific DPTRS threshold that might be used for the detection of preclinical T1D depends on the desired degree of certainty of an ultimate diagnosis. More individuals would be identified by a lower threshold, but the 9.00 threshold provides more assurance that T1D will occur over a short interval. This was evident in the data presented for the 8.75 and the 8.00 thresholds. Although we have conservatively chosen the 9.00 threshold to define a preclinical T1D state, it is arguable that lower thresholds could be used. In both DPT-1 and the TNNHS, even the 8.00 threshold identified individuals at substantially higher risk than those who developed dysglycemia in DPT-1. The ultimate choice of a threshold would be dependent upon the particular research needs and objectives.

The higher postchallenge C-peptide values at the time the 9.00 threshold was exceeded are consistent with our prior DPT-1 findings (7,8) in which values fell markedly from 6 months before diagnosis to diagnosis. This could very possibly be indicative of a loss of β-cell function. Since the 9.00 threshold was exceeded an average of >9 months before diagnosis, the lower C-peptide values at diagnosis would be expected.

The glucose criteria for T1D used in this report have been the “gold standard” for years. Those criteria were based on the rationale of defining a threshold according to the occurrence of complications (1). The possibility of preserving β-cell function provides an alternative rationale for identifying T1D at an earlier stage of its development. The persistence of C-peptide in Diabetes Control and Complications Trial participants was associated with a decreased risk of complications (19,20). The substantially higher C-peptide levels at the time the 9.00 threshold was first exceeded suggest that it would be more advantageous to intervene in that preclinical diabetic state than at diagnosis. Although no treatment is known to preserve insulin secretion before diagnosis, the efficacy of treatments in new-onset patients (12–14) indicates that this is a distinct possibility.

In conclusion, this study shows that it is now possible to identify individuals who are in a state of preclinical T1D, when C-peptide levels are appreciably higher. It appears that a 9.00 DPTRS threshold can be used for this purpose in autoantibody-positive populations.

Acknowledgments

This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health through the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, and the National Center for Research Resources; by the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International; and by the American Diabetes Association.

No potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article were reported.

J.M.S. analyzed data and wrote the manuscript. J.S.S., J.M., J.P.K., C.J.G., L.E.R., and C.C. conducted the study and reviewed the manuscript. C.A.B. provided statistical support. D.C.B. and D.C. provided programming and statistical support. J.P.P. conducted the study and wrote and reviewed the manuscript. J.M.S. is the guarantor of this work and, as such, had full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Parts of this study were presented in abstract form at the 71st Scientific Sessions of the American Diabetes Association, San Diego, California, 24–28 June 2011.

  • Received January 3, 2012.
  • Accepted March 18, 2012.
  • © 2012 by the American Diabetes Association.

Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.

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The Application of the Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 Risk Score for Identifying a Preclinical State of Type 1 Diabetes
Jay M. Sosenko, Jay S. Skyler, Jeffrey Mahon, Jeffrey P. Krischer, Craig A. Beam, David C. Boulware, Carla J. Greenbaum, Lisa E. Rafkin, Catherine Cowie, David Cuthbertson, Jerry P. Palmer, the Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet and Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 Study Groups
Diabetes Care Jul 2012, 35 (7) 1552-1555; DOI: 10.2337/dc12-0011

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The Application of the Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 Risk Score for Identifying a Preclinical State of Type 1 Diabetes
Jay M. Sosenko, Jay S. Skyler, Jeffrey Mahon, Jeffrey P. Krischer, Craig A. Beam, David C. Boulware, Carla J. Greenbaum, Lisa E. Rafkin, Catherine Cowie, David Cuthbertson, Jerry P. Palmer, the Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet and Diabetes Prevention Trial–Type 1 Study Groups
Diabetes Care Jul 2012, 35 (7) 1552-1555; DOI: 10.2337/dc12-0011
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