Diabetes
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) autoantibodies in prediction of beta-cell function and remission in recent-onset IDDM after cyclosporin treatment. The Canadian-European Randomized Control Trial Group.
We have investigated whether glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) autoantibodies (GAD65 Ab) were affected by cyclosporin therapy and were related to subsequent non-insulin-requiring remission and loss of glucagon-stimulated C-peptide response in 132 recent-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) patients treated with cyclosporin or placebo for 12 months. GAD65 Ab were detected in a quantitative radioligand assay using as tracer recombinant, in vitro translated, human islet [35S]methionine-labeled GAD65. GAD65 Ab were found at onset in 66% (87 of 132) of IDDM patients and in 1% (1 of 100) of healthy control subjects. ⋯ The presence or absence of GAD65 Ab at study entry did not predict non-insulin-requiring remission in either cyclosporin- or placebo-treated patients. However, the relative (compared with 0 months) glucagon-stimulated C-peptide response was more than 30% lower in GAD65 Ab+ patients receiving placebo at 9 and 12 months compared with the GAD65 Ab- placebo patients (P < 0.035). Islet cell cytoplasmic antibody (ICA) and GAD65 Ab+ placebo-treated patients showed no significant differences in stimulated C-peptide levels compared with those who were ICA- and GAD65 Ab+, suggesting that ICA was not independently associated with loss of beta-cell function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)