Skip to Main Content

Key Points

  • Disease summary:

    • MODY is estimated to explain 0.2% to 2% of adult diabetes diagnosed before 45 years of age, and is frequently misdiagnosed as either type 1 or type 2 diabetes.

    • The correct diagnosis of MODY is important to inform therapeutic interventions, disease prognosis, presymptomatic screening, and genetic counseling.

    • American Diabetes Association diagnostic categories of diabetes include type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, gestational diabetes, and other specific types of diabetes. The various forms of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) are classified as “genetic defects of beta-cell function” within the “other specific types” category.

  • Hereditary basis:

    • All forms of MODY are inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion.

    • Penetrance: Overall estimated at 80% to 95% lifetime; however, lower penetrance diabetes loci such as HNF1B (50%) contribute to MODY.

    • Prevalence of MODY is approximately 50 to 200 per million individuals.

  • Genetic differential diagnosis:

    • It is important to distinguish MODY from mitochondrial diabetes and deafness (MIDD), neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM), and syndrome-related diabetes.

    • MIDD represents up to 1% of diabetes and is characterized by maternal inheritance and deafness as the name suggests. The most common mitochondrial mutation (m.3243A>G) is also causative of several other mitochondrial syndromes including mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes syndrome (MELAS) and therefore has phenotypic overlap.

    • NDM is diagnosed before 6 months and may be transient (TNDM) or permanent (PNDM) in nature. TNDM is caused by an imprinting defect in the 6q24 region that leads to excessive paternally derived expression of the PLAGL1 and HYMAJ genes in approximately 70% of cases. PNDM, and less commonly TNDM, may be caused by a mutation in the constituents of the beta-cell K-ATP channel (KCNJ11 or ABCC8). PNDM may also result from homozygous or compound heterozygous loss of function mutations in the GCK or INS genes. Mutations in the K-ATP channel are important to identify because they may be treated with high-dose sulfonylureas. Patients with TNDM are at increased risk for diabetes in adulthood.

    • Diabetes is associated with several genetic syndromes: Down syndrome, Klinefelter syndrome, Turner syndrome, Wolfram syndrome, Friedreich ataxia, Huntington disease, Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome, myotonic dystrophy, porphyria, Prader-Willi syndrome, lipodystrophy, and many others.

Diagnostic Criteria and Clinical Characteristics

Diagnostic Criteria for MODY

Historic diagnostic criteria for MODY are (1) hyperglycemia typically before age 25 years, (2) an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern affecting three generations, (3) absence of insulin therapy at least 5 years after diagnosis or significant C-peptide levels in a patient on insulin therapy indicating a beta-cell function defect, (4) absence of obesity or evidence of peripheral resistance. Families diagnosed with MODY frequently violate the historic diagnostic criteria: They may present at a later age, have fewer affected generations, progress rapidly, and have an elevated body mass index (BMI).

MODY is a clinically heterogeneous group of disorders consequent to genetic heterogeneity, allelic heterogeneity, variable ...

Pop-up div Successfully Displayed

This div only appears when the trigger link is hovered over. Otherwise it is hidden from view.