The full article is accessible to AMA members and paid subscribers. Login to read more or purchase a subscription now.
Please note: institutional and Research4Life access to the MJA is now provided through Wiley Online Library.
- 1 Saint Vincent's Hospital Sydney, Sydney, NSW
- 2 University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW
- 3 Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney, NSW
- 4 University of Notre Dame Australia, Sydney, NSW
Correspondence: r.bishay@garvan.org.au
Acknowledgements:
We thank Professors Don Chisholm and Lesley Campbell from the Garvan Institute of Medical Research for their editorial contribution to this manuscript.
Competing interests:
No relevant disclosures.
- 1. Rubio-Cabezas O, Hattersley AT, Njolstad PR, et al. ISPAD Clinical Practice Consensus Guidelines 2014. The diagnosis and management of monogenic diabetes in children and adolescents. Pediatr Diabetes 2014; 15 Suppl 20: 47-64.
- 2. Chakera AJ, Steele AM, Gloyn AL, et al. Recognition and management of individuals with hyperglycemia because of a heterozygous glucokinase mutation. Diabetes Care 2015; 38: 1383-1392.
- 3. Froguel P, Vaxillaire M, Sun F, et al. Close linkage of glucokinase locus on chromosome 7p to early-onset non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Nature 1992; 356: 162-164.
- 4. Hattersley AT, Turner RC, Permutt MA, et al. Linkage of type 2 diabetes to the glucokinase gene. Lancet 1992; 339: 1307-1310.
- 5. Tattersall RB. Mild familial diabetes with dominant inheritance. Q J Med 1974; 43: 339-357.
- 6. Chakera AJ, Spyer G, Vincent N, et al. The 0.1% of the population with glucokinase monogenic diabetes can be recognized by clinical characteristics in pregnancy: the Atlantic Diabetes in Pregnancy cohort. Diabetes Care 2014; 37: 1230-1236.
- 7. Ellard S, Bellanne-Chantelot C, Hattersley AT; European Molecular Genetics Quality Network (EMQN) MODY Group. Best practice guidelines for the molecular genetic diagnosis of maturity-onset diabetes of the young. Diabetologia 2008; 51: 546-553.
- 8. Pearson ER, Boj SF, Steele AM, et al. Macrosomia and hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia in patients with heterozygous mutations in the HNF4A gene. PLoS Med 2007; 4: e118.
- 9. Shaw J, Tanamas S. Diabetes: the silent pandemic and its impact on Australia. Melbourne: Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, 2012.
- 10. Gardner DS, Tai ES. Clinical features and treatment of maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY). Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes 2012; 5: 101-108.
- 11. Nankervis A, McIntyre HD, Moses R, et al. ADIPS consensus guidelines for the testing and diagnosis of hyperglycaemia in pregnancy in Australia and New Zealand. Sydney: Australian Diabetes in Pregnancy Society; 2014. http://adips.org/downloads/2014ADIPSGDMGuidelinesV18.11.2014_000.pdf (accessed Mar 2016).
- 12. Fajans SS, Bell GI, Polonsky KS. Molecular mechanisms and clinical pathophysiology of maturity-onset diabetes of the young. N Engl J Med 2001; 345: 971-980.
- 13. Pihoker C, Gilliam LK, Ellard S, et al. Prevalence, characteristics and clinical diagnosis of maturity onset diabetes of the young due to mutations in HNF1A, HNF4A, and glucokinase: results from the SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2013; 98: 4055-4062.
- 14. Timsit J, Saint-Martin C, Dubois-Laforgue D, Bellanne-Chantelot C. Searching for maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY): when and what for? Can J Diabetes 2016; 40: 455-461.
- 15. Fajans SS. Scope and heterogeneous nature of MODY. Diabetes Care 1990; 13: 49-64.
- 16. Pearson ER, Starkey BJ, Powell RJ, et al. Genetic cause of hyperglycaemia and response to treatment in diabetes. Lancet 2003; 362: 1275-1281.
- 17. Stride A, Vaxillaire M, Tuomi T, et al. The genetic abnormality in the beta cell determines the response to an oral glucose load. Diabetologia 2002; 45: 427-435.
- 18. Menzel R, Kaisaki PJ, Rjasanowski I, et al. A low renal threshold for glucose in diabetic patients with a mutation in the hepatocyte nuclear factor-1alpha (HNF-1alpha) gene. Diabet Med 1998; 15: 816-820.
- 19. Pearson ER, Liddell WG, Shepherd M, et al. Sensitivity to sulphonylureas in patients with hepatocyte nuclear factor-1alpha gene mutations: evidence for pharmacogenetics in diabetes. Diabet Med 2000; 17: 543-545.
- 20. Shields BM, Hicks S, Shepherd MH, et al. Maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY): how many cases are we missing? Diabetologia 2010; 53: 2504-2508.
- 21. Shammas C, Neocleous V, Phelan MM, et al. A report of 2 new cases of MODY2 and review of the literature: implications in the search for type 2 diabetes drugs. Metabolism 2013; 62: 1535-1542.
- 22. Nolan CJ, Prentki M. The islet beta-cell: fuel responsive and vulnerable. Trends Endocrinol Metab 2008; 19: 285-291.
- 23. Steele AM, Wensley KJ, Ellard S, et al. Use of HbA1c in the identification of patients with hyperglycaemia caused by a glucokinase mutation: observational case control studies. PLoS One 2013; 8: e65326.
- 24. Feigerlova E, Pruhova S, Dittertova L, et al. Aetiological heterogeneity of asymptomatic hyperglycaemia in children and adolescents. Eur J Pediatr 2006; 165: 446-452.
- 25. Chambers C, Fouts A, Dong F, et al. Characteristics of maturity onset diabetes of the young in a large diabetes center. Pediatr Diabetes 2016; 17: 360-367.
- 26. Spyer G, Hattersley AT, Sykes JE, et al. Influence of maternal and fetal glucokinase mutations in gestational diabetes. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2001; 185: 240-241.
- 27. Chakera AJ, Carleton VL, Ellard S, et al. Antenatal diagnosis of fetal genotype determines if maternal hyperglycemia due to a glucokinase mutation requires treatment. Diabetes Care 2012; 35: 1832-1834.
- 28. Stride A, Shields B, Gill-Carey O, et al. Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies suggest pharmacological treatment used in patients with glucokinase mutations does not alter glycaemia. Diabetologia 2014; 57: 54-56.
- 29. Sagen JV, Bjorkhaug L, Molnes J, et al. Diagnostic screening of MODY2/GCK mutations in the Norwegian MODY Registry. Pediatr Diabetes 2008; 9: 442-449.
- 30. Osbak KK, Colclough K, Saint-Martin C, et al. Update on mutations in glucokinase (GCK), which cause maturity-onset diabetes of the young, permanent neonatal diabetes, and hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia. Hum Mutat 2009; 30: 1512-1526.
- 31. Diabetes Genes [website] United Kingdom. 2016. http://www.diabetesgenes.org (accessed Sept 2016).
- 32. Mater Pathology. Molecular genetics — individual gene tests [website]. Brisbane: 2016. http://pathology.mater.org.au/for-doctors/molecular-genetic-tests (accessed Sept 2016).
- 33. Steele AM, Shields BM, Wensley KJ, et al. Prevalence of vascular complications among patients with glucokinase mutations and prolonged, mild hyperglycemia. JAMA 2014; 311: 279-286.
- 34. Martin D, Bellanne-Chantelot C, Deschamps I, et al. Long-term follow-up of oral glucose tolerance test-derived glucose tolerance and insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity indexes in subjects with glucokinase mutations (MODY2). Diabetes Care 2008; 31: 1321-1323.
- 35. Brownlee M, Hirsch IB. Glycemic variability: a hemoglobin A1c-independent risk factor for diabetic complications. JAMA 2006; 295: 1707-1708.
- 36. Naylor RN, John PM, Winn AN, et al. Cost-effectiveness of MODY genetic testing: translating genomic advances into practical health applications. Diabetes Care 2014; 37: 202-209.
- 37. Schnyder S, Mullis PE, Ellard S, et al. Genetic testing for glucokinase mutations in clinically selected patients with MODY: a worthwhile investment. Swiss Med Wkly 2005; 135: 352-356.
- 38. Rich SS. Diabetes: still a geneticist’s nightmare. Nature 2016.
- 39. Fuchsberger C, Flannick J, Teslovich TM, et al. The genetic architecture of type 2 diabetes. Nature 2016; 536: 41-47.
- 40. van der Zwaag AM, Weinreich SS, Bosma AR, et al. Current and best practices of genetic testing for maturity onset diabetes of the young: views of professional experts. Public Health Genomics 2015; 18: 52-59.
Online responses are no longer available. Please refer to our instructions for authors page for more information.
Summary