Authors
Cecilia Martinez Escobedo, Anna Birukov, Ralph Heijmans, Olga Kuxhaus, Fabian Eichelmann, Roderick C Slieker, Elham Memarian, Nina Simunic-Briski, Femke Rutters, Marieke T Blom, Marta Riera, Marta Crespo, Manfred Wuhrer, Clara Barrios, Mandy van Hoek, Leen M 't Hart, Eric Sijbrands, Gordan Lauc, Matthias B Schulze, Clemens Wittenbecher
Published in
Diabetes care. Jul 17, 2026. Epub Jul 17, 2026.
Abstract
To examine whether IgG N-glycosylation patterns are prospectively associated with incident diabetic nephropathy and neuropathy.
We analyzed IgG N-glycosylation profiles in four cohorts: EPIC-Potsdam, DiaGene, GenoDiabMar, and Hoorn DCS. Among 3,263 individuals with and without type 2 diabetes at profiling, 674 incident neuropathy and 639 incident nephropathy cases occurred after diabetes diagnosis. Associations of IgG N-glycan peaks (IgG-GPs) and traits with incident outcomes were examined using Cox models and meta-analyzed across cohorts.
Agalactosylated, asialylated, and bisected IgG-GPs were associated with higher nephropathy risk (IgG-GP3: hazard ratio [HR] 1.13 [95% CI 1.04-1.24]; IgG-GP4: HR 1.15 [95% CI 1.05-1.26]), while galactosylated and sialylated IgG-GPs were associated with lower risk (IgG-GP14: HR 0.86 [95% CI 0.78-0.94]; IgG-GP18: HR 0.85 [95% CI 0.77-0.94]) (all false discovery rate <0.05). Associations of IgG-GPs with incident neuropathy were rendered nonsignificant after multiple testing correction.
IgG N-glycosylation may reflect immune-related mechanisms relevant to diabetic nephropathy; but the evidence between IgG-GPs and diabetic neuropathy remains inconclusive.
PMID:
42467059
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 17 Jul 2026.
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