Connect
MJA
MJA

A review of maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and challenges in the management of glucokinase-MODY

Ramy H Bishay and Jerry R Greenfield
Med J Aust 2016; 205 (10): . || doi: 10.5694/mja16.00458
Published online: 21 November 2016

Summary

  • Maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY), the most common monogenic form of diabetes, accounts for 1–2% of all diabetes diagnoses.
  • Glucokinase (GCK)-MODY (also referred to as MODY2) constitutes 10–60% of all MODY cases and is inherited as an autosomal dominant heterozygous mutation, resulting in loss of function of the GCK gene.
  • Patients with GCK-MODY generally have mild, fasting hyperglycaemia that is present from birth, are commonly leaner and diagnosed at a younger age than patients with type 2 diabetes, and rarely develop complications from diabetes. Hence, treatment is usually unnecessary and may be ceased. Therefore, genetic screening is recommended in all young patients (< 40 years) with an autosomal dominant family history of diabetes and who lack features of the metabolic syndrome and type 1 diabetes. Further, treatment discontinuation should be discussed with the patient as part of the informed consent process, as the realisation that prior treatment may have not been necessary — or that it could have been less burdensome — may have psychological implications for the patient. This is true for other forms of MODY, such as hepatocyte nuclear factor 1A mutations (MODY3) where hyperglycaemia is managed with low dose sulfonylurea rather than insulin.
  • Patients with GCK-MODY, in line with trends in the general population, are becoming older and more overweight and obese, and are concomitantly developing features of insulin resistance and glucose intolerance. Therefore, controversy exists as to whether such “treatment-exempt” patients should be reassessed for treatment later in life.
  • As testing becomes more accessible, clinicians and patients are likely to embrace genetic screening earlier in the course of diabetes, which may avert the consequences of delayed testing years after diagnosis and treatment initiation.


  • 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.

Author

remove_circle_outline Delete Author
add_circle_outline Add Author

Comment
Do you have any competing interests to declare? *

I/we agree to assign copyright to the Medical Journal of Australia and agree to the Conditions of publication *
I/we agree to the Terms of use of the Medical Journal of Australia *
Email me when people comment on this article

Online responses are no longer available. Please refer to our instructions for authors page for more information.