DOI: 10.2337/db06-0856 © 2006 by the American Diabetes Association
Islet Autoimmunity in Children With Downs Syndrome
1 Diabetes and Metabolism Unit, Department of Clinical Science at North Bristol, University of Bristol, Bristol, U.K Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. K.M. Gillespie, Medical School Unit, Southmead Hospital, Bristol BS10 5NB, U.K. E-mail: k.m.gillespie{at}bristol.ac.uk
Abbreviations:
GADA, GAD antibody; IA-2A, IA-2 antibody; WHO, World Health Organization
There is an unexplained excess of type 1 diabetes and other organ-specific autoimmune diseases in children with Downs syndrome, but the immunogenetic characteristics of diabetes in Downs syndrome have not been investigated. We studied the frequency of islet autoantibodies in 106 children with Downs syndrome and no history of autoimmunity and analyzed HLA class II genotypes in 222 children with Downs syndrome, 40 children with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes, 120 age- and sex-matched children with type 1 diabetes, and 621 healthy control subjects. Co-occurrence of at least two islet autoantibody markers was observed in 6 of 106 nondiabetic children with Downs syndrome compared with 13 of 2,860 healthy age-matched children (P < 0.001). There was an excess of diabetes-associated HLA class II genotypes in children with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes compared with age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects (P < 0.001). Downs syndrome children with type 1 diabetes were, however, less likely to carry the highest risk genotype DR4-DQ8/DR3-DQ2 than children with type 1 diabetes from the general population (P = 0.01) but more likely to carry low-risk genotypes (P < 0.0001). The frequency of subclinical islet autoimmunity is increased in Downs syndrome, and susceptibility to type 1 diabetes in Downs syndrome is partially HLA mediated. Other factors, possibly including genes on chromosome 21, may increase the penetrance of type 1 diabetes in Downs syndrome. Rare forms of a disease often help to explain the mechanisms underlying a more common form of the disorder. There is an increased frequency of clinically diagnosed type 1 diabetes and other organ-specific autoimmune diseases associated with type 1 diabetes in children with Downs syndrome. Individuals with Downs syndrome and diabetes may therefore provide critical insights into mechanisms underlying susceptibility to immune-mediated diabetes, but islet autoantibodies or HLA class II markers of type 1 diabetes have not been studied in children with Downs syndrome. Downs syndrome is a common genetic defect (1:700 live births), affecting over 300,000 people in the U.S. and 30,000 in the U.K. (1,2). A considerably increased risk of diabetes has been consistently reported in children with Downs syndrome (3,4). In a questionnaire-based study of 20,362 patients with Downs syndrome in the U.K. and U.S., the prevalence of diabetes diagnosed before age 20 years in the Downs syndrome population was some six times higher than expected (5), and other studies suggest an approximate fourfold increase in childhood diabetes (3,6). A more recent population-based study of the prevalence of type 1 diabetes in Downs syndrome in Denmark demonstrated a fourfold increased risk of type 1 diabetes in children with Downs syndrome (7). Although classification was generally made on clinical grounds alone, most appear to have type 1 diabetes. For example, diabetes requiring insulin within a month of diagnosis and ketonuria has been shown to be 10 times more common in Downs syndrome than expected (4). Diabetes in Downs syndrome generally presents early in life; one study from the 1960s showed a peak onset at 8 years of age, compared with 14 years in contemporary cases of childhood diabetes (8). In a more recent study of 59 individuals with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes, 22% developed diabetes by the age of 2 years, as compared with 7% of those from the general population (9). Although the children examined in the studies described above appear to have the clinical features of type 1 diabetes, no studies of the frequency of islet autoantibodies in Downs syndrome have been carried out. An autoimmune basis seems likely, since the risk of other organ-specific autoimmune diseases is also greatly increased in Downs syndrome. The prevalence of autoimmune thyroid disease is at least fourfold higher in children with Downs syndrome than in the general population (10,11), and celiac disease may be 10–40 times more common (12–,14). Downs syndrome therefore appears to confer susceptibility to multiple forms of autoimmunity, although no mechanism has been proposed to explain this phenomenon. Some specific genes have been linked to different autoimmune diseases, for instance the HLA haplotype DRB1*03-DQA1*0501-DQB1*0201 (DR3-DQ2) is a major susceptibility haplotype for type 1 diabetes as well as thyroid disease and celiac disease. An excess of this haplotype in Downs syndrome could potentially contribute to increased risk of autoimmunity in Downs syndrome, but there are no published studies of HLA class II in children with Downs syndrome and diabetes. The aims of this study were to determine whether there is evidence of increased islet autoimmunity in children with Downs syndrome (1), whether the frequency of diabetes-associated HLA class II genotypes is increased in children with Downs syndrome (2), and whether HLA class II associations in Downs syndrome and diabetes are the same as those observed in type 1 diabetes (3).
The study populations included 222 children with Downs syndrome, 40 children with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes, 120 age- and sex-matched children with type 1 diabetes, and 621 healthy control subjects. Ethical permission was granted for all studies described, and informed consent from the child and/or parents was obtained for all samples.
Downs syndrome.
Downs syndrome and diabetes.
Type 1 diabetic control subjects.
General population control subjects.
Islet autoantibody analysis.
Genetic analysis
Data analysis.
Of the 106 children with Downs syndrome tested, GADAs were present in 8, IA-2A in 5, and insulin autoantibodies in 9 children. Two or more islet autoantibodies were present in 6 of 106 children with Downs syndrome compared with 13 of 2,860 healthy schoolchildren (P < 0.001) (Table 1). As demonstrated in Fig. 1, levels of GADA in the Downs syndrome samples were particularly high; all eight GADA-positive samples had levels >99.0th centile (28 WHO units/ml), and seven were >99.5th centile (46 WHO units/ml). When all data were analyzed using the 99.0th centile as the threshold, 2 of 106 individuals were positive for two or more islet autoantibodies compared with 8 of 2,860 healthy schoolchildren (P = 0.005).
Comparison of HLA class II genotypes showed similar distributions of diabetes-associated genotypes in children with Downs syndrome and healthy control subjects (Table 2). The frequency of the most strongly associated type 1 diabetes–associated HLA class II genotype (DR4-DQ8/DR3-DQ2) was increased in children with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes (P < 0.001), indicating that type 1 diabetes in Downs syndrome has the same HLA associations as type 1 diabetes in the general population. Of children with Downs syndrome and diabetes, 70% were positive for either DR4-DQ8/DR3-DQ2, DR4-DQ8/X, or DR3-DQ2/X compared with only 44% of the healthy control population (P < 0.01). None of the children with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes were positive for HLA DRB1*02-DQB1*0602 (DR2-DQ6).
Direct comparison of the frequency of DR4-DQ8/DR3-DQ2 in the Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetic group (n = 40) and an age- and sex-matched type 1 diabetic population (n = 120) indicated that only 25% were DR4-DQ8/DR3-DQ2 positive compared with 43% (P = 0.01), and more children with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes are negative for diabetes-associated HLA class II haplotypes (X/X) (P < 0.0001).
We have shown that islet autoimmunity is increased in children with Downs syndrome. Two or more markers of islet autoimmunity were present in 6 of 106 children with Downs syndrome as compared with 13 of 2,860 healthy schoolchildren (P < 0.001), and high levels of GADA were observed in all eight children who tested positive. Since relatively little is known about the HLA class II status of people with Downs syndrome, we first wished to exclude the possibility that an excess of autoimmunity-associated HLA haplotypes might explain the increased risk of autoimmunity observed in Downs syndrome. Our data reveal that the HLA class II haplotypes DR4-DQ8 and DR3-DQ2 are not overrepresented in Downs syndrome. This is in agreement with earlier studies of HLA class I in children with Downs syndrome. One study found no differences between HLA-A and -B between 50 couples and their offspring with Downs syndrome, compared with 50 control families and 464 blood donors (20). Similarly, Soubiran et al. (21) examined 30 couples with a child with Downs syndrome typed for HLA-A and -B antigens compared with 20 control families and 176 blood donors, and no significant differences were reported. The excess of susceptibility to autoimmunity in Downs syndrome is therefore not attributable to differences in HLA. Diabetes-associated HLA class II haplotypes are however increased in children with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes (P < 0.001), showing that type 1 diabetes in Downs syndrome has the same HLA associations as type 1 diabetes in the general population, suggesting that it shares the same etiology. The frequency of the highest risk HLA class II genotype was however almost twice as high in the type 1 diabetic control group as in the Downs syndrome and diabetic group (43 vs. 25%, respectively) (P = 0.01), and more children in the Downs syndrome and diabetes group were negative for diabetes-associated HLA class II haplotypes compared with age-matched control subjects with type 1 diabetes. No child with Downs syndrome and diabetes was positive for the protective haplotype HLA class II DRB1*02-DQB1*0602. One limitation of this study is the number of Downs syndrome and diabetes samples available for analysis. The combination of Downs syndrome and diabetes is relatively rare. Robust prevalence data recently available for Denmark demonstrated that of 1.23 million births between 1981 and 2000, only 8 individuals were identified with both Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes (7). If a similar frequency exists in the U.K., we have identified >10% of the possible national cohort. To confirm this, we are currently initiating a nationwide collection of samples from all individuals with Downs syndrome and type 1 diabetes in the U.K. Our data are consistent with the possibility that a gene, or genes, on chromosome 21 may increase the penetrance of type 1 diabetes in Downs syndrome. A recent Scandanavian genome scan for genes associated with type 1 diabetes identified an area of interest on chromosome 21 (22). Recent fine mapping of this region in 253 Danish families supported the existence of a susceptibility gene for type 1 diabetes on chromosome 21q21.11-q22.3 (23). Taken together, these data support the need for further studies to identify genetic variants on chromosome 21 that may increase the penetrance of type 1 diabetes in Downs syndrome.
This study was funded by Diabetes UK and the Wellcome Trust. We are grateful for the help of the Downs Syndrome Society in identifying individuals with Downs syndrome and diabetes, to Prof. Anna Kessling for DNA samples from children with Downs syndrome, to the many consultants who took blood samples, and the excellent administrative support of Dr. Claire Lewis.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Received for publication June 23, 2006 and accepted in revised form August 10, 2006
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