Autoimmune destruction of the pancreatic beta-cells resulting in beta-cell deficiency and therefore absolute insulin deficiency
Aetiology
Types of diabetes
- Type 1 diabetes is subdivided into 1A (immune mediated) and 1B (non-immune mediated)
- Type 1A accounds for the vast majority of T1DM patients and involves an environmental trigger in a genetically susceptible individual mediated by an auto-immune process within the pancreatic β-cell
- A 'slow-burning' variant of type 1A with slower progression to insulin deficiency occurs in later life and is termed latent autoimmune disease in adults (LADA)
- Type 1B (idiopathic) involves patients with permanent insulinopenia and who are prone to DKA but have no evidence of β-cell dysfunction or autoantibodies
- Accounts for a minority of patients with T1DM (~5%)
- Most patients are of African or Asian ancestry
- Strongly inherited and not HLA associated
Risk factors
Age
- 85% of DM in under 20s, peak 10-14 years
- 25% diagnosed as adults - small peak in late 30s (LADA)
- Clinical presentation at all ages up to 9th decade
Genetic susceptibility and inheritance
- HLA genes represent ~50% of familial risk of T1DM - high risk HLA genotypes include DR3-DQ2 and DR4-DQ8
- If both patients have HLA alleles risk of offspring developing diabetes is 30%
- Only 5% of those with susceptible HLA genes develop DM - indicates strong environmental contribution
- At least 47 non-HLA genes or gene regions that influence risk to a minor extent
Environmental factors
- Maternal factors e.g. gestational infection and older age
- Viral infections e.g. enteroviruses such as Coxsackie B4
- Exposure to dietary constituents such as early introduction to cow's milk and relative deficiency of vitamin D
- Environmental toxins e.g. alloxan
- Childhood obesity
- Psychological stress
Pathophysiology
- Genetic susceptibility
- Environmental trigger (often associated with previous viral infection)
- T-cell mediated autoimmune response with production of autoantibodies that target and destroy β-cells
- Insulitis visable on β-cell biopsy with lymphocytic infiltrate
- Absolute insulin deficiency → elevated blood glucose levels

Clinical presentation
- Usually acute onset
- Polydipsia
- Polyuria
- Thrush
- Weakness, fatigue
- Blurred vision
- Infections
- Severe weight loss
Investigations
Diagnostic criteria
- Fasting glucose ≳7.0 mmol/l with symptoms, if asymptomatic repeat test OR
- Random glucose ≳11.1 mmol/l with symptoms, if asymptomatic repeat test
- Often T1DM is diagnosed on positive findings as above, history and presentation (e.g. DKA) but if in doubt GAD/IA2 antibodies and C peptide may help
- HbA1c not used in diagnosis of T1DM but is used to monitor disease after diagnosis
Autoantibodies

Management
Insulin
- Usually basal (long-acting once daily) bolus (short-acting with meals) regimen which aims to mimic normal endogenous insulin production
- Most people should be treated with MDI (3-4x injections per day) or CSII
- Most people with T1DM should use insulin analogues to reduce hypoglycaemia risk
- Rotate injection site to avoid lipohypertrophy
Education and self-monitoring
- Patients should have a method of self-monitoring their blood glucose and also have access to a ketone monitor
- Most people should be educated how to match prandial insulin dose to carbohydrate intake, pre-meal glucose and anticipated activity, as well as sick day rules
- There are structured education courses avaliable for patients e.g. DAFNE, BERTE
- Regular DSN and dietician contact
Annual review assessment
- Weight
- Blood pressure
- Bloods: HbA1c, renal function and lipids
- Retinal screening
- Foot risk assessment
- Record severe hypoglycaemic episodes or admission with DKA
Pancreas transplant
Islet transplantation
- Pancreatic islets harvested from cadavers and then are injected into the portal vein where they seed themselves in the liver
- Typically reserved for those with:
- Episodes of severe hypoglycaemia
- Severe and progressive long-term complications despite maximal therapy
- Uncontrolled diabetes despite maximal treatment
- The goal of treatment is to prevent severe hypoglycaemia but about 50-70% of people receiving islet cell transplants also achieve insulin independence after 5 years
Whole-pancreas transplantation
- Most often undertaken in people with T1DM and end-stage kidney disease at the same time as a kidney transplant
- Pancreas transplant may be performed after a kidney transplant or alone
- Indications: severe hypoglycaemia/metabolic complications, incapacitating clinical or emotional problems