Table 1.
CIADM | T1D | |
---|---|---|
Presentation | DKA in 67.5% at presentation (55). 47.5% have a comorbid irAE, most common being thyroid (24.5%) (55). | DKA in 39% children at presentation (104), 6% in adults (105) |
Clinical course | Fulminant presentation, median 9 weeks after ICI treatment | Progressive development of islet autoantibodies → overt hyperglycaemia at presentation |
No spontaneous remission phase or “honeymooning”. Overt insulin deficiency and low C-peptide at presentation in most (<0.3ng/ml in 63.4%) (55) | ‘Honeymooning’ in 68.9% of children with T1D with partial recovery of β-cell function (106) | |
Progressive decline in C-peptide, 48% maintain stimulated C-peptide >0.2nmol/L at 5 years (107) | ||
Autoantibodies | Anti-GAD autoantibodies + in 43% (overall islet autoantibody positivity 20-71%) (55). | Islet autoantibodies + in 90% (40) |
Genetic predisposition | 65.4% with T1D susceptibility haplotype, 10.3% with T1D protective haplotype (55) | T1D susceptible haplotypes in 90% (80) |
Exocrine pancreas involvement | Pancreatic enzymes elevated in 51% (55), pancreatic atrophy on imaging (54, 95) | Lower lipase vs normal controls except in fulminant phenotype (86), reduced pancreatic volumes (83–85) |
Proposed pathophysiology | Prior exposure to environmental trigger leading to islet specific autoimmunity, tolerised by PD-L1 | Genetic predisposed individual exposed to an environmental trigger, leading to autoimmune β-cell destruction |
Exposure to anti-PD1 or anti-PD-L1 unmasks autoimmunity and triggers β-cell destruction |
DKA, diabetic ketoacidosis; irAE, immune related adverse event.