Paediatric diabetes subtypes in a consanguineous population: a single-centre cohort study from Kurdistan, Iraq.
Shenali A AmaratungaTara Hussein TayebRozhan N Muhamad SediqFareda K Hama SalihPetra DusatkovaMatthew N WakelingElisa De FrancoStepanka PruhovaJan LeblPublished in: Diabetologia (2023)
This unique single-centre study confirms that, even in a highly consanguineous population, clinically defined type 1 diabetes is the prevailing paediatric diabetes subtype. Furthermore, a pathogenic cause of monogenic diabetes was identified in 83% of tested participants with neonatal diabetes and 57% of participants with syndromic diabetes, with most variants being homozygous. Causative genes in our consanguineous participants were markedly different from genes reported from non-consanguineous populations and also from those reported in other consanguineous populations. To correctly diagnose syndromic diabetes in consanguineous populations, it may be necessary to re-evaluate diagnostic criteria and include additional phenotypic features such as short stature and hepatosplenomegaly.