Endocrine Connections (Dec 2024)

Clinical features and search for genetic determinants of postprandial hypoglycaemia

  • Qian Ren,
  • Xueyao Han,
  • Siqian Gong,
  • Simin Zhang,
  • Tianhao Ba,
  • Yilin Zhao,
  • Yating Li,
  • Yan’ai Wang,
  • Xianghai Zhou,
  • Yufeng Li,
  • Linong Ji

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1530/EC-24-0409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1

Abstract

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Objective: To test whether postprandial hypoglycaemia is an extreme and repeatable phenotype of glucose metabolism. We also explored the genetic determinants of this phenotype. Design and methods: We conducted this study using data from the Pinggu Metabolic Disease Study database (n = 3,345). We selected subjects after an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) (2 h glucose 3 μU/mL when postprandial blood glucose levels were <3 mmol/L. WES analysis identified one gene, paternally expressed 3 (PEG3), which had three rare mutations in four patients (30.8%). Minor allele frequencies of rare PEG3 mutations were significantly higher in subjects with postprandial hypoglycaemia than in super-healthy controls. Among the four subjects with PEG3 gene mutations, 71.4% were men, and their body mass index was significantly lower than that of the NGT group. Conclusions: Postprandial hypoglycaemia is an extreme and reproducible phenotype in the general population. PEG3 mutations may represent a potential genetic aetiology for postprandial hypoglycaemia. Further research with larger and more diverse populations and a broader genetic focus is needed to understand the genetic basis of postprandial hypoglycaemia.

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