TY - JOUR
T1 - The heterogeneity of type 1 diabetes
T2 - implications for pathogenesis, prevention, and treatment—2024 Diabetes, Diabetes Care, and Diabetologia Expert Forum
AU - Evans-Molina, Carmella
AU - Dor, Yuval
AU - Lernmark, Åke
AU - Mathieu, Chantal
AU - Millman, Jeffrey R.
AU - Mirmira, Raghavendra G.
AU - Pociot, Flemming
AU - Redondo, Maria J.
AU - Rich, Stephen S.
AU - Richardson, Sarah J.
AU - Rickels, Michael R.
AU - Leslie, R. David
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© American Diabetes Association and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes 2025.
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - This article summarises the current understanding of the heterogeneity of type 1 diabetes from a June 2024 international Expert Forum organised by the editors of Diabetes, Diabetes Care, and Diabetologia. The Forum reviewed key factors contributing to the development and progression of type 1 diabetes and outlined specific, high-priority research questions. Knowledge gaps were identified and, notably, opportunities to harness disease heterogeneity to develop personalised therapies were outlined. Herein, we summarise our discussions and review the heterogeneity of genetic risk and immunologic and metabolic phenotypes that influence and characterise type 1 diabetes progression (presented as a palette of risk factors). We discuss how these age-related factors determine disease aggressiveness (along gradients) and describe how variable immunogenetic pathways aggregate (into networks) to affect beta cell and other pancreatic pathologies to cause clinical disease at different ages and with variable severity (described as disease-related thresholds). Heterogeneity of pathogenesis and clinical severity opens avenues to prevention and intervention, including the potential of disease-modifying immunotherapy and islet cell replacement. We conclude with a call for (1) continued research to identify more factors contributing to the disease, both overall and in specific subgroups; (2) investigations focusing on both individuals who surpass metabolic and immune thresholds and develop diabetes and those who remain disease free with the same level of immunogenetic risk; and (3) efforts to identify where the current type 1 diabetes staging system may fall short and determine how it can be improved to capture and leverage heterogeneity in prevention and intervention strategies.
AB - This article summarises the current understanding of the heterogeneity of type 1 diabetes from a June 2024 international Expert Forum organised by the editors of Diabetes, Diabetes Care, and Diabetologia. The Forum reviewed key factors contributing to the development and progression of type 1 diabetes and outlined specific, high-priority research questions. Knowledge gaps were identified and, notably, opportunities to harness disease heterogeneity to develop personalised therapies were outlined. Herein, we summarise our discussions and review the heterogeneity of genetic risk and immunologic and metabolic phenotypes that influence and characterise type 1 diabetes progression (presented as a palette of risk factors). We discuss how these age-related factors determine disease aggressiveness (along gradients) and describe how variable immunogenetic pathways aggregate (into networks) to affect beta cell and other pancreatic pathologies to cause clinical disease at different ages and with variable severity (described as disease-related thresholds). Heterogeneity of pathogenesis and clinical severity opens avenues to prevention and intervention, including the potential of disease-modifying immunotherapy and islet cell replacement. We conclude with a call for (1) continued research to identify more factors contributing to the disease, both overall and in specific subgroups; (2) investigations focusing on both individuals who surpass metabolic and immune thresholds and develop diabetes and those who remain disease free with the same level of immunogenetic risk; and (3) efforts to identify where the current type 1 diabetes staging system may fall short and determine how it can be improved to capture and leverage heterogeneity in prevention and intervention strategies.
KW - Early biological markers of type 1
KW - Genetics of type 1 diabetes
KW - Immune pathogenesis type 1 diabetes
KW - Immunogenetics
KW - Islet cell pathology
KW - Islet cell preservation
KW - Islet degeneration and damage
KW - Islet development
KW - Islet transplantation
KW - Prediction and prevention of type 1 diabetes
KW - Review
KW - Stem cells
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012307248
U2 - 10.1007/s00125-025-06462-y
DO - 10.1007/s00125-025-06462-y
M3 - Review article
C2 - 40736345
AN - SCOPUS:105012307248
SN - 0012-186X
VL - 68
SP - 1859
EP - 1878
JO - Diabetologia
JF - Diabetologia
IS - 9
ER -