3.8 Article

Japanese Type 1 Diabetes Database Study (TIDE-J): rationale and study design

Journal

DIABETOLOGY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 288-294

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s13340-021-00541-2

Keywords

Type 1 diabetes; Database; Multi-center; Electric data collection

Funding

  1. National Center for Global Health and Medicine [19A1008]

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The Japanese Type 1 Diabetes Database Study (TIDE-J) aims to establish a multi-center prospective longitudinal database of three T1D subtypes, with the goal of revealing distinct clinical courses and identifying novel markers for diagnosis. The study collects clinical data, genetic information, and biobanking samples annually to investigate clinical outcomes and predict disease severity in patients with T1D.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is classified into three subtypes: acute-onset, slowly progressive, and fulminant T1D, according to the heterogeneity of clinical course in Japan. Although several cross-sectional databases of T1D have been reported, prospective longitudinal databases to investigate clinical outcomes are lacking in our country. Therefore, we herein construct multi-center prospective longitudinal database of the three subtypes of T1D, accompanied with genetic information and biobanking, which is named Japanese Type 1 Diabetes Database Study (TIDE-J). Inclusion criteria of this study are as follows: (1) the duration of T1D was less than 5 years, (2) the patients had one or more islet-related autoantibodies and/or fasting serum C-peptide levels were less than 1.0 ng/mL, (3) the patients could clearly understand the study consent in writing. In the TIDE-J, clinical data, including glycemic control, endogenous insulin secretion, islet-related autoantibodies, diabetic complications, and treatment, are collected annually using electric data collection system, which is named REDCap. Furthermore, HLA genotypes of each participant were analyzed at entry and the blood samples were stored for assessing exploratory markers and further genetic analysis annually. The TIDE-J certainly helps in revealing distinct clinical course of each T1D subtype. Moreover, this database may help in identifying novel markers for diagnosing each subtype of T1D and predicting clinical outcomes (including pancreatic beta cell function and disease severity) in patients.

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