Prevalence of Diabetes‐Associated Autoantibodies in Schoolchildren: The Karlsburg Type 1 Diabetes Risk Study

2004 
: This study attempts to assess the prevalence of diabetes-associated autoantibodies in a general population in the northeastern part of Germany, with emphasis on autoantibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GADA), protein tyrosine phosphatase (IA-2A), and insulin (IAA) by radioassays ≥ 98th percentile, and AAbs binding on pancreatic sections (ICA) by immunofluorescence ≥ 10 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation units. From a total of 11,840 schoolchildren tested for all four AAbs, 821 (6.9%) children were positive for single AAbs, whereas 83 (0.7%) had multiple AAbs. If the primary screening were performed by testing GADA/IA-2A/IAA, 94% of probands with single AAbs and all with multiple AAbs would be identified. The combinations of GADA/IA-2A, GADA/IAA, and IA-2A/IAA would identify 97.6, 98.8, and 85.5% of probands with multiple AAbs, respectively. Thus, combined AAb screening in the general population identifies those probands at risk for diabetes.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    4
    References
    26
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []