Journal Home
Search for

Volume 19, Issue 9, Pages 674-682 (November 2009)


View previous. 14 of 14

Diabetes related autoimmunity in gestational diabetes mellitus: Is it important?

A. LapollaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, M.G. Dalfrà, D. Fedele

Received 24 September 2008; received in revised form 6 February 2009; accepted 1 April 2009. published online 22 June 2009.

Abstract 

Some GDM women show autoantibody positivity during and after pregnancy and pancreatic autoantibodies can appear for the first time in some patients after delivery. Autoantibody positivity is often accompanied by a high frequency of DR3 and DR4 alleles, which are classically related to the development of type 1 diabetes and, although not all studies agree on this point, by an immunological imbalance expressed by the behaviour of the lymphocyte subpopulation, which can be seen as diabetic anomalies overlapping with the immunological changes that occur during pregnancy. It is worth emphasizing that such patients may develop classical type 1 diabetes during and/or after their pregnancy or they may evolve, often some years after their pregnancy, into cases of latent autoimmune diabetes of adulthood (LADA).

Autoimmune GDM accounts for a relatively small number of cases (about 10% of all GDM) but the risk of these women developing type 1 diabetes or LADA is very high, so these patients must be identified in order to prevent the severe maternal and fetal complications of type 1 diabetes developing in pregnancy, or its acute onset afterwards.

Since women with autoimmune GDM must be considered at high risk of developing type 1 diabetes in any of its clinical forms, these women should be regarded as future candidates for the immunomodulatory strategies used in type 1 diabetes.

Department of Clinical and Surgical Sciences-Chair of Metabolic Disease, Padova University, Via Giustiniani n 2, 35100 Padova, Italy

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Department of Clinical and Surgical Sciences-Chair of Metabolic Disease, Padova University, Via Giustiniani n 2, 35100 Padova, Italy. Tel.: +390498216848; fax: +390498216838.

PII: S0939-4753(09)00094-5

doi:10.1016/j.numecd.2009.04.004


View previous. 14 of 14