Type 1 Diabetes: A Guide to Autoimmune Mechanisms for Clinicians.

🥉 Top 5% JournalMay 16, 2025Diabetes, obesity & metabolism

Type 1 Diabetes: Understanding the Immune System's Role for Doctors

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Abstract

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) may develop silently over years before symptoms appear.

  • T1D results from the immune system attacking and destroying insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas.
  • The disease progresses through three stages, with a 35-50% risk of advancing to full-blown diabetes within five years from the first stage.
  • Over 60 genes are linked to T1D risk, primarily affecting immune system function, but 90% of diagnosed individuals have no family history of the disease.
  • Environmental factors, including certain viral infections and the gut microbiome, may influence the risk of developing T1D.
  • Current treatments focus on insulin replacement, but new research is exploring therapies aimed at protecting or replacing beta cells.

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Key numbers

35%–50%
Risk of progression from Stage 1 to clinical T1D
Percentage risk based on progression through the stages of T1D.
up to 50%
Genetic risk contribution from HLA polymorphism
Proportion of genetic risk attributed to HLA variations.
>60
Number of genes linked to T1D risk
Total number of identified genes affecting T1D susceptibility.

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