Background: Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) exhibits considerable heterogeneity, impacting prediction, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. Precision medicine aims to tailor treatments using 'endotypes'-subtypes of disease with distinct pathophysiological mechanisms. However, proposed endotypes often lack mechanistic associations with clinical outcomes for accurately identifying T1D cases. Methods: This study introduces an approach leveraging the multi-omics factor analysis (MOFA) strategy, a computational method for unsupervised integration analysis, to explore endotypes. Analyzing data from 146 new-onset children with T1D (54 females, 92 males; age range 5-18 years), including circulating immunome, transcriptome, and serum metabolic hormones, we identify 12 factors explaining variability across the three data sets. Results: Here we find no associations, either direct or through clustering, between these 12 factors and clinical parameters, genetic predisposition, or disease outcome. These results suggest that a combination of clinical phenotypes might be responsible for the differences across T1D cases. Conclusions: These findings challenge the assumption that T1D heterogeneity reflects diverse developmental mechanisms. These results add to the ongoing debate on endotypes and carry important implications for clinical trial design-particularly in how treatments are evaluated for their effectiveness across broad and diverse patient populations.
A multi-omics integration approach relying on circulating factors does not discern subtypes of childhood type 1 diabetes / Codazzi, Valentina; Baldoni, Nicola; Scotti, Giulia M; Giovenzana, Anna; Rigamonti, Andrea; Frontino, Giulio; Bezzecchi, Eugenia; Genzano, Camillo Bechi; Mandelli, Alessandra; Carnovale, Debora; Marzinotto, Ilaria; Lampasona, Vito; Fiorina, Paolo; Giustina, Andrea; Piemonti, Lorenzo; Battaglia, Manuela; Morelli, Marco J; Bonfanti, Riccardo; Petrelli, Alessandra. - In: COMMUNICATIONS MEDICINE. - ISSN 2730-664X. - 5:1(2025). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1038/s43856-025-00922-7]
A multi-omics integration approach relying on circulating factors does not discern subtypes of childhood type 1 diabetes
Giovenzana, Anna;Genzano, Camillo Bechi;Marzinotto, Ilaria;Giustina, Andrea;Piemonti, Lorenzo;Bonfanti, Riccardo;
2025-01-01
Abstract
Background: Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) exhibits considerable heterogeneity, impacting prediction, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. Precision medicine aims to tailor treatments using 'endotypes'-subtypes of disease with distinct pathophysiological mechanisms. However, proposed endotypes often lack mechanistic associations with clinical outcomes for accurately identifying T1D cases. Methods: This study introduces an approach leveraging the multi-omics factor analysis (MOFA) strategy, a computational method for unsupervised integration analysis, to explore endotypes. Analyzing data from 146 new-onset children with T1D (54 females, 92 males; age range 5-18 years), including circulating immunome, transcriptome, and serum metabolic hormones, we identify 12 factors explaining variability across the three data sets. Results: Here we find no associations, either direct or through clustering, between these 12 factors and clinical parameters, genetic predisposition, or disease outcome. These results suggest that a combination of clinical phenotypes might be responsible for the differences across T1D cases. Conclusions: These findings challenge the assumption that T1D heterogeneity reflects diverse developmental mechanisms. These results add to the ongoing debate on endotypes and carry important implications for clinical trial design-particularly in how treatments are evaluated for their effectiveness across broad and diverse patient populations.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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