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The Aggressive Diabetic Kidney Disease in Youth-Onset Type 2 Diabetes: Pathogenetic Mechanisms and Potential Therapies

Journal

MEDICINA-LITHUANIA
Volume 57, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/medicina57090868

Keywords

diabetic kidney disease; youth-onset type 2 diabetes mellitus; diabetic nephropathy; D2M pathophysiology and novel treatments

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Youth-onset T2DM is a significant global burden with high prevalence rates in China and the United States, driven by genetic factors and coexisting risk factors like obesity and hyperglycemia. Understanding the pathogenesis and treatment evolution of DKD in this population is crucial to reducing the risk of DKD progression.
Youth-onset Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) represents a major burden worldwide. In the last decades, the prevalence of T2DM became higher than that of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM), helped by the increasing rate of childhood obesity. The highest prevalence rates of youth-onset T2DM are recorded in China (520 cases/100,000) and in the United States (212 cases/100,000), and the numbers are still increasing. T2DM young people present a strong hereditary component, often unmasked by social and environmental risk factors. These patients are affected by multiple coexisting risk factors, including obesity, hyperglycemia, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, hypertension, and inflammation. Juvenile T2DM nephropathy occurs earlier in life compared to T1DM-related nephropathy in children or T2DM-related nephropathy in adult. Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is T2DM major long term microvascular complication. This review summarizes the main mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of the DKD in young population and the recent evolution of treatment, in order to reduce the risk of DKD progression.

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