학술논문

Data Mining Framework for Discovering and Clustering Phenotypes of Atypical Diabetes
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. April, 2023, Vol. 108 Issue 4, p834, 13 p.
Subject
Texas
Language
English
ISSN
0021-972X
Abstract
Context: Some individuals present with forms of diabetes that are 'atypical' (AD), which do not conform to typical features of either type 1 diabetes (T1D) or type 2 diabetes (T2D). These forms of AD display a range of phenotypic characteristics that likely reflect different endotypes based on unique etiologies or pathogenic processes. Objective: To develop an analytical approach to identify and cluster phenotypes of AD. Methods: We developed Discover Atypical Diabetes (DiscoverAD), a data mining framework, to identify and cluster phenotypes of AD. DiscoverAD was trained against characteristics of manually classified patients with AD among 278 adults with diabetes within the Cameron County Hispanic Cohort (CCHC) (Study A). We then tested DiscoverAD in a separate population of 758 multiethnic children with T1D within the Texas Children's Hospital Registry for New-Onset Type 1 Diabetes (TCHRNO-1) (Study B). Results: We identified an AD frequency of 11.5% in the CCHC (Study A) and 5.3% in the pediatric TCHRNO-1 (Study B). Cluster analysis identified 4 distinct groups of AD in Study A: cluster 1, positive for the 65 kDa glutamate decarboxylase autoantibody (GAD65Ab), adult-onset, long disease duration, preserved beta-cell function, no insulin treatment; cluster 2, GAD65Ab negative, diagnosed at age [less than or equal to]21 years; cluster 3, GAD65Ab negative, adult-onset, poor beta-cell function, lacking central obesity; cluster 4, diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA)-prone participants lacking a typical T1D phenotype. Applying DiscoverAD to the pediatric patients with T1D in Study B revealed 2 distinct groups of AD: cluster 1, autoantibody negative, poor beta-cell function, lower body mass index (BMI); cluster 2, autoantibody positive, higher BMI, higher incidence of DKA. Conclusion: DiscoverAD can be adapted to different datasets to identify and define phenotypes of participants with AD based on available clinical variables. Key Words: atypical diabetes, clusters, type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, ketosis-prone diabetes, bioinformatics
The worldwide epidemic of diabetes has revealed marked clinical heterogeneity in patients with diabetes, including phenotypes that do not conform to typical features of either type 1 diabetes (T1D) or [...]