Standardizing T-Cell Biomarkers in Type 1 Diabetes: Challenges and Recent Advances
Author(s) -
Simi Ahmed,
Karen Cerosaletti,
Eddie A. James,
S. Alice Long,
Stuart I. Mannering,
Cate Speake,
Maki Nakayama,
Timothy Tree,
Bart O. Roep,
Kevan C. Herold,
Todd M. Brusko
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
diabetes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.219
H-Index - 330
eISSN - 1939-327X
pISSN - 0012-1797
DOI - 10.2337/db19-0119
Subject(s) - type 2 diabetes , diabetes mellitus , medicine , type 1 diabetes , computational biology , intensive care medicine , bioinformatics , biology , endocrinology
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) results from the progressive destruction of pancreatic β-cells in a process mediated primarily by T lymphocytes. The T1D research community has made dramatic progress in understanding the genetic basis of the disease as well as in the development of standardized autoantibody assays that inform both disease risk and progression. Despite these advances, there remains a paucity of robust and accepted biomarkers that can effectively inform on the activity of T cells during the natural history of the disease or in response to treatment. In this article, we discuss biomarker development and validation efforts for evaluation of T-cell responses in patients with and at risk for T1D as well as emerging technologies. It is expected that with systematic planning and execution of a well-conceived biomarker development pipeline, T-cell-related biomarkers would rapidly accelerate disease progression monitoring efforts and the evaluation of intervention therapies in T1D.
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