Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (type 1 diabetes)
20,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A deceased 59-year-old woman with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus complicated by chronic thyroiditis and chronic hepatitis was autopsied. She had had diabetes mellitus since she was 30 years old, and insulin therapy was started at 34 years. Laboratory findings were as follows: s-GOT 85, s-GPT 31, gamma-globulin 2.45 g/dl. Immunological tests were positive for anti-smooth muscle antibody and anti-ENA antibody with high titers of antithyroglobulin and anti-microsome antibodies. HLA analysis revealed the presence of DR-4. The thyroid biopsy specimen showed microscopic features characteristic of chronic thyroiditis at 52 years of age. She had been repeatedly admitted for the control of diabetes mellitus. She was admitted for the 9th time in June, 1987 following complaints of abdominal pain. After admission, her general condition became gradually worse, and she died of peritonitis in September, 1987. Pathological examination of the liver revealed an expansion of fibrous tissue on Glisson's capsule accompanied by lymphocytic infiltration and was diagnosed to be chronic inactive hepatitis. As for the thyroid gland, fibrous tissue replaced an extensive area of the thyroid gland, and normal thyroid tissue was not observed. Lymphocytic infiltration was less in comparison with that in the previous biopsy. As for the pancreas, atrophy of exocrine pancreatic tissue and fibrous change in interstitial tissue was observed. Lymphocytic infiltration was also seen in the interstitial exocrine tissue but not in the islet. Immunohistochemical examination of the islets using anti-insulin, glucagon and somatostatin antibodies by ABC peroxidase method showed the selective disappearance of B cells in the islets. The pathological changes in the thyroid gland, liver and pancreas suggest that autoimmune mechanism may be involved in the pathogenesis of chronic thyroiditis, chronic hepatitis and IDDM with exocrine pancreatic impairment in this case.
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PMID:[An autopsied case of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus complicated by chronic thyroiditis and chronic hepatitis]. 259 7

We report a case of IDDM which occurred during interferon therapy for chronic hepatitis. A 31-year-old man intermittently received 2.5 x 10(8) units of alpha-IFN and 1 x 10(8) units of beta-IFN for treatment of chronic viral hepatitis type B. Four years after the beginning of IFN therapy, he acutely developed moderate hyperglycemia and severe ketonuria with positive islet cell antibody, and then 28 units/day of insulin injection was started. After the start of insulin therapy, there was a remission period for about 3 years but insulin-dependency recurred thereafter. The clinical course of this case indicates that IFN therapy precedes IDDM. During and after IFN therapy we should consider the possibility of occurrence of IDDM as well as other autoimmune diseases and observe the clinical course carefully.
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PMID:Occurrence of IDDM during interferon therapy for chronic viral hepatitis. 801 61

Six transplantations of the liver were performed over a period of six years in five adult patients with Type I diabetes mellitus (DM). The diabetic group included two males and three females with a mean age of 36 years and a mean duration of DM of 20 years. Primary diseases of the liver included two instances of primary biliary cirrhosis, two instances of sclerosing cholangitis and one instance of autoimmune chronic hepatitis. Three patients also received a simultaneous whole organ pancreatic transplant. All patients were managed with cyclosporine and prednisone immunosuppression with selective OKT3 induction. Patient and hepatic allograft survival rates were 80 and 67 percent, respectively, after a mean follow-up period of 4.7 years. One of the three pancreatic grafts was successful and resulted in euglycemia for two years. Three patients have subsequently undergone successful renal transplantation at one, two and one-half, and six and one-half years after hepatic transplantation. Although transplantation of the liver can be performed safely in carefully selected patients with Type I DM, these patients are still at risk for the development of progressive nephropathy. Renal transplantation is an acceptable therapeutic alternative when this occurs.
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PMID:Orthotopic hepatic transplantation in patients with type I diabetes mellitus. 814 33

Development of type 1 insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus has been recently reported in patients who underwent interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) therapy because of chronic viral hepatitis. Furthermore IFN-alpha seems to be involved in the immunological events that lead to beta-cell destruction and development of type 1 diabetes. To evaluate whether IFN-alpha treatment could elicit an autoimmune response against beta-cell antigens, we determined the occurrence of islet cell antibodies and insulin autoantibodies in the sera of 60 patients with HCV- or HBV-related chronic hepatitis who had been treated with IFN-alpha for 6 or 12 months. The presence of antibodies against thyroglobulin, thyroid microsomal antigen, gastric parietal cells, and non-organ-specific antigens was also investigated. Insulin autoantibody positivity was observed in 2/60 (3.3%), 8/60 (13.3%), and 4/30 (13.3%) patients, before IFN-alpha treatment, and after 6 months and 12 months of therapy, respectively. None of the studied patients developed islet cell antibodies or type 1 diabetes. Before IFN-alpha therapy four patients showed thyroid autoantibodies and four others developed antibodies against thyroglobulin and/or thyroid microsomal antigen during the treatment. Coexistence of insulin autoantibodies and thyroid autoantibodies was observed in only two patients. Our results showed that IFN-alpha therapy in patients with chronic viral hepatitis is capable of inducing development of autoantibodies against insulin. This event seems to be not related to other autoimmune disorders.
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PMID:Interferon-alpha therapy may induce insulin autoantibody development in patients with chronic viral hepatitis. 876

We describe two patients with liver kidney microsomal antibody type 1 (LKM1)-positive autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) with associated endocrinopathies. The first patient had insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM), and the second patient had Addison's disease and hypoparathyroidism, and is also positive for islet cell antibodies, without overt diabetes. To account for the existence of multiple endocrinopathy in these patients, we investigated whether there is sequence similarity between the target of LKM1 antibodies, cytochrome P4502D6 (CYP2D6), and other human proteins, and if so, whether this structural similarity produces a detectable cross-reactive immune response. Our database search identified two proteins, carboxypeptidase H, an autoantigen in insulin-dependent diabetes, and 21-hydroxylase, the major autoantigen in Addison's disease, that share sequence similarity to the second major LKM1 epitope on CYP2D6. We tested the reactivity of sera from these patients to the homologous regions of the three autoantigens using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The cut-off for positivity was established by testing sera from 22 healthy children. To determine the significance of reactivity to the peptide homologues of the three autoantigens, we investigated 16 additional patients with LKM1 AIH and 20 children with chronic hepatitis B virus infection as pathological controls. We found that reactivity to the second major epitope of CYP2D6 is significantly associated with reactivity to the homologous regions of carboxypeptidase H (CPH) and 21-hydroxylase (21-OHase) in patients with LKM1 AIH, and that this simultaneous recognition is cross-reactive. We suggest that a cross-reactive immune response between homologous autoantigens may contribute to the development of multiple endocrinopathies in LKM1 AIH.
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PMID:Immunological cross-reactivity to multiple autoantigens in patients with liver kidney microsomal type 1 autoimmune hepatitis. 979 98

We report on a 36-year-old patient suffering from chronic hepatitis C. Because of elevated liver enzymes and histology showing chronic inflammation and periportal fibrosis, interferon-alpha (IFN) therapy was started with a dosage of 5 Mio units three times a week. Four months later the patient hat to be hospitalized due to the typical clinical features of a recent onset type 1 diabetes (BG > 300 mg/dl, HbA1c 9.6%, ketonuria). In serum samples prior to and following interferon therapy, we analyzed titers of diabetes-related autoantibodies responding to GAD65 (glutamic acid decarboxylase), IA2c (tyrosine phosphatase) and ICA (islet cell autoantibodies). While ICA were negative before starting therapy, IA2c-antibodies were highly elevated. In contrast. GAD65-antibodies were elevated only slightly over the cut-off of the assay before therapy (controlled by a second different RIA assay) and increased 100 fold during IFN-alpha treatment. Additionally thyroid antibodies appeared. After the end of the IFN therapy, GAD65- and IA2c antibodies remained on high levels and also ICA could now be found. The patient was positive for HLA-DR4. This case supports the hypothesis that IFN-alpha therapy may lead to an augmented autoimmune reaction against islet cell antigens resulting in the development of diabetes mellitus type 1, especially if there are other predisposing factors before IFN treatment. We further discuss the possible involvement of interferon-alpha in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes with reference to recent studies.
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PMID:[Augmentation of the immune response to islet cell antigens with development of diabetes mellitus caused by interferon-alpha therapy in chronic hepatitis C]. 1023 96

Treatment of chronic hepatitis with interferon-alpha is an increasingly used successful therapeutic procedure. In the literature in recent years data accumulated on side-effects of interferon therapy, among which relatively frequently insulin dependent diabetes is mentioned. Interferon-alpha enhances the expression of molecules of the histocompatible complex I which may cause in genetically predisposed subjects the clinical manifestation of diabetes. It is therefore recommended to monitor before the onset of treatment and during interferon treatment the auto-antibody formation against islet cells and against insulin which signalizes changes in the pancreas before the clinical disease proper.
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PMID:[Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus as a possible sequelae of treatment of viral hepatitis with interferon-alpha] . 1118 63

Interferon (IFN)-alpha is used for the treatment of chronic viral hepatitis. It has been associated with various forms of autoimmune disease, e.g. autoimmune hepatitis, Hashimoto thyroiditis and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Further, an increase of insulin resistance and development of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus has been described after treatment with IFN-alpha. Several studies have investigated the induction of different autoimmune markers by IFN-alpha, but only few specified patients who developed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. We report the case of a 37-year-old man with chronic hepatitis C who was treated with IFN-alpha plus ribavirin. Thirty weeks after the start of treatment, the patient developed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and therapy was withdrawn. HLA typing showed an HLA-DR1,3 phenotype. At manifestation of diabetes mellitus, the C-peptide level was 0.37 ng/ml (normal range 0.5-3 ng/ml). The patient had a positive family history for type 2 diabetes. Several autoimmune markers were investigated before, during and 6 months after withdrawal of antiviral treatment. High titres of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) antibodies were present before therapy. A significant increase in titres of islet cell antibodies, parietal cell antibodies and sperm antibodies was present after 14 weeks of IFN-alpha treatment. Six months after withdrawal of IFN-alpha therapy, these antibodies had significantly decreased whereas GAD antibodies remained unchanged. There was no clinical sign of any other autoimmune disease. Our data show that, in patients with a predisposition to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, the disease may become manifest as a side-effect during therapy with IFN-alpha. Several pathogenetic factors may be involved in this process, and, in addition to IFN-alpha, hepatitis C itself may induce autoimmune mechanisms. We conclude that screening for autoantibodies specific for type 1 diabetes should be performed before the start of IFN-alpha treatment. In patients found to be at increased risk of developing diabetes mellitus type 1, monitoring of titres of these antibodies during therapy could help to assess the individual risk-benefit ratio of IFN-alpha treatment.
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PMID:Development of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in a patient with chronic hepatitis C during therapy with interferon-alpha. 1129 53

This study aimed at elucidating the effects of interferon (IFN)-alpha on glucose metabolism in patients with chronic hepatitis B and C infections. Twenty-eight biopsy-proven patients with chronic hepatitis B (ten cases) and hepatitis C (18 cases) were given IFN-alpha for a total of 24 weeks. The patients received a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), glucagon stimulation test, tests for type 1 diabetes-related autoantibodies and an insulin suppression test before and after IFN-alpha therapy. Ten of the 28 patients responded to IFN-alpha therapy. Steady-state plasma glucose of the insulin suppression test decreased significantly in responders (13.32+/-1.48 (S.E.M.) vs 11.33+/-1.19 mmol/l, P=0.0501) but not in non-responders (12.29+/-1.24 vs 11.11+/-0.99 mmol/l, P=0.2110) immediately after completion of IFN-alpha treatment. In the oral glucose tolerance test, no significant difference was observed in plasma glucose in either responders (10.17+/-0.23 vs 10.03+/-0.22 mmol/l) or non-responders (10.11+/-0.22 vs 9.97+/-0.21 mmol/l) 3 Months after completion of IFN-alpha treatment. However, significant differences were noted in C-peptide in both responders (2.90+/-0.13 vs 2.20+/-0.09 nmol/l, P=0.0040) and non-responders (2.45+/-0.11 vs 2.22+/-0.08 nmol/l, P=0.0287) before vs after treatment. The changes of C-peptide in an OGTT between responders and non-responders were also significantly different (P=0.0028), with responders reporting a greater reduction in C-peptide. No case developed autoantibodies during the treatment. In patients who were successfully treated with IFN-alpha, insulin sensitivity improved and their plasma glucose stayed at the same level without secreting as much insulin from islet beta-cells.
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PMID:Interferon-alpha reduces insulin resistance and beta-cell secretion in responders among patients with chronic hepatitis B and C. 1296 37

Type 1 diabetes mellitus is the result of an autoimmune process characterized by pancreatic beta cell destruction. It has been reported that chronic hepatitis C infection is associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus, but not with type 1. Although the prevalence of markers of pancreatic autoimmunity in hepatitis C virus-positive patients is not significantly different to that reported in the general population, it increases during alpha-interferon therapy from 3 to 7%, probably due to the immunostimulatory effects of this cytokine. To date, 31 case reports of type 1 diabetes mellitus related to interferon treatment have been published. Type 1 diabetes mellitus occurs more frequently in patients treated for chronic hepatitis C than for other conditions and is irreversible in most cases. In 50% of these patients, markers of pancreatic autoimmunity predated treatment, the majority of cases having a genetic predisposition. Thus, in predisposed individuals, alpha-interferon can either induce or accelerate a diabetogenic process already underway. We suggest that islet cell autoantibodies and glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies should be investigated before and during interferon treatment in order to identify subjects at high risk of developing type 1 diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Type 1 diabetes mellitus in patients with chronic hepatitis C before and after interferon therapy. 1296 81


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