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Dimorphic histopathology of long-standing childhood-onset diabetes
Authors:R. Gianani  M. Campbell-Thompson  S. A. Sarkar  C. Wasserfall  A. Pugliese  J. M. Solis  S. C. Kent  B. J. Hering  E. West  A. Steck  S. Bonner-Weir  M. A. Atkinson  K. Coppieters  M. von Herrath  G. S. Eisenbarth
Affiliation:1. Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes, University of Colorado Denver, 1775 Aurora Court, Aurora, CO, 80055, USA
2. Department of Pathology, University of Florida at Gainesville, Gainesville, FL, USA
3. The Diabetes Research Institute, Miami, FL, USA
4. Center for Neurologic Diseases, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
5. The Schulze Diabetes Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
6. Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
7. La Jolla Institute of Allergology and Immunology, La Jolla, CA, USA
Abstract:

Aims/hypothesis

Childhood diabetes is thought to usually result from autoimmune beta cell destruction (type 1A) with eventual total loss of beta cells. Analysis of C-peptide in children characterised at diabetes onset for autoantibodies shows heterogeneous preservation of insulin secretion in long-standing diabetes. The aim of this study was to characterise the pancreases of childhood-onset diabetes in order to define the pathological basis of this heterogeneity.

Methods

We evaluated 20 cadaveric organ donor pancreases of childhood-onset long-term patients for disease heterogeneity and obtained corresponding C-peptide measurements.

Results

Pancreases from the majority of cadaveric donors contained only insulin-deficient islets (14 of 20). The remaining six patients (30%) had numerous insulin-positive cells within at least some islets, with two different histological patterns. Pattern A (which we would associate with type 1A diabetes) had lobular retention of areas with ‘abnormal’ beta cells producing the apoptosis inhibitor survivin and HLA class I. In pattern B, 100% of all islets contained normal-appearing but quantitatively reduced beta cells without survivin or HLA class I.

Conclusions/interpretation

Our data demonstrate that C-peptide secretion in long-standing diabetic patients can be explained by two different patterns of beta cell survival, possibly reflecting different subsets of type 1 diabetes.
Keywords:
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