The stage- and subgroup-specific impact of non-HLA polymorphisms on preclinical type 1 diabetes progression

the Belgian Diabetes Registry, Julie Vandewalle, Aster K. Desouter, Bart J. Van der Auwera, Kaven B. Chapaza, Frank Nobels, Pascale Abrams, Marie Christine Lebrethon, Bruno Lapauw, Bart Keymeulen, Frans K. Gorus, Mark Van de Casteele

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Besides variation within the HLA gene complex determining a major part of genetic susceptibility to Type 1 diabetes, genome-wide association studies have identified over 60 non-HLA loci also contributing to disease risk. While individual single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have limited predictive power, genetic risk scores (GRS) can identify at-risk individuals. However, current models do not fully capture the heterogeneous progression of asymptomatic islet autoimmunity, especially in autoantibody-positive subjects. In this study, we investigated the additional stage-specific impact of 17 non-HLA loci on previously established prediction models in 448 persistently autoantibody-positive first-degree relatives. Cox regression and Kaplan Meier survival analysis were used to assess their influence on progression from single to multiple autoantibody-positivity, and from there to clinical onset. FUT2 and CTSH significantly accelerated progression of single to multiple autoAb-positivity, but only in presence of insulin autoantibodies and HLA-DQ2/DQ8, respectively. At the stage of multiple autoantibody-positivity, progression to clinical onset was impacted by various non-HLA SNPs either as independent predictors (GLIS3, CENPW, IL2, GSDM, MEG3A, and NRP-1) or through interaction with HLA class I alleles (CLEC16A, NRP-1, TCF7L2), maternal diabetes status (CTSH), or a high-risk autoantibody-profile (CD226). Our data indicate that, unlike for GRS, the weight of distinct non-HLA polymorphisms varies significantly among individuals at risk, depending on disease stage and other stage-specific risk factors. They refine our previous stage-specific prediction models including age, autoantibody-profile, HLA genotype, and other non-HLA SNPs, and emphasize the importance of stratifying accordingly to personalize time-to-event prediction in risk groups, or for preparing or interpreting prevention trials.

Originele taal-2English
Artikelnummere42156
Aantal pagina's12
TijdschriftHeliyon
Volume11
Nummer van het tijdschrift3
DOI's
StatusPublished - 15 feb 2025

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