Clinical Characteristics and Long-term Follow-up of Patients with Diabetes Due To PTF1A Enhancer Mutations

No Thumbnail Available
Authors
Flanagan, Sarah
Hattersley, Andrew T.
De Franco, Elisa
Journal
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Type
Journal Article
Publisher
Silverchair Information Systems
Rights
© Endocrine Society 2020. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
CC0 1.0 Universal
Context: Biallelic mutations in the PTF1A enhancer are the commonest cause of isolated pancreatic agenesis. These patients do not have severe neurological features associated with loss-of-function PTF1A mutations. Their clinical phenotype and disease progression have not been well characterized. Objective: To evaluate phenotype and genotype characteristics and long-term follow-up of patients with PTF1A enhancer mutations. Setting: Twelve tertiary pediatric endocrine referral centers. Patients: Thirty patients with diabetes caused by PTF1A enhancer mutations. Median follow-up duration was 4 years. Main outcome measures: Presenting and follow-up clinical (birthweight, gestational age, symptoms, auxology) and biochemical (pancreatic endocrine and exocrine functions, liver function, glycated hemoglobin) characteristics, pancreas imaging, and genetic analysis. Results: Five different homozygous mutations affecting conserved nucleotides in the PTF1A distal enhancer were identified. The commonest was the Chr10:g.23508437A>G mutation (n = 18). Two patients were homozygous for the novel Chr10:g.23508336A>G mutation. Birthweight was often low (median SDS = -3.4). The majority of patients presented with diabetes soon after birth (median age of diagnosis: 5 days). Only 2/30 presented after 6 months of age. All patients had exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. Five had developmental delay (4 mild) on long-term follow-up. Previously undescribed common features in our cohort were transiently elevated ferritin level (n = 12/12 tested), anemia (19/25), and cholestasis (14/24). Postnatal growth was impaired (median height SDS: -2.35, median BMI SDS: -0.52 SDS) with 20/29 (69%) cases having growth retardation. Conclusion: We report the largest series of patients with diabetes caused by PTF1A enhancer mutations. Our results expand the disease phenotype, identifying recurrent extrapancreatic features which likely reflect long-term intestinal malabsorption.
Citation
Demirbilek H et al. Clinical Characteristics and Long-term Follow-up of Patients with Diabetes Due To PTF1A Enhancer Mutations. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2020 Dec 1;105(12):e4351–9.
Note
This article is available to RD&E staff via NHS OpenAthens (subject to any publisher embargo). Click on the Publisher URL, and log in with NHS OpenAthens if prompted.