Two topics, insulin autoimmune syndrome and early-onset diabetes care, have been selected for the final lecture in the Tokyo Women's Medical University (TWMU).
Insulin autoimmune syndrome (IAS), or Hirata's disease, first described by Hirata in 1971, is characterized by fasting hypoglycemia without evidence of exogenous insulin administration, high concentration of total serum immune reactive insulin, and the presence of high titer autoantibodies against native human insulin in serum. Other characteristics associated with IAS are the high frequencies of HLA-DR4 positivity, the prevalence of IAS in Japan, and the intake of drugs containing sulfhydryl compounds before IAS onset. We found that IAS showed a strong association with HLA-DR4 (mostly with DRB1*04:06, less frequently with DRB1*04:03 or DRB1*04:07), which encode glutamate at position 74 in the HLA-DR beta molecules, and is presumed to be essential to the production of polyclonal insulin autoantibodies in IAS.
As part of a physicians' professional duty of care for early-onset diabetes patients, the staff at our clinic aim to provide high-quality care for these patients with early-onset DM to improve treatment outcomes. Patients with type 1 diabetes were found to have a better prognosis compared to those attending other clinics, which suggests an improved care system at TWMU diabetes center.