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Introduction overall, 60% non-White), including 20 participants with MODY (3%). Given the longitudinal design of these studies, MODY probability was calculated for each participant at multiple time points, allowing maximum and median probabilities. Results: Of the 20 individuals with MODY, 19 (95%) had a 60% median probability of having MODY. However, this calculator overestimated the probability in participants with no MODY variant detected. In fact, 85% of individuals without MODY had a maximum probability 60% of having MODY, and 67% had a median probability 60%. Family history of diabetes did not discriminate diabetes type with more T2D patients having a parent affected (64% v 55% in MODY). In contrast, HbA1c and BMI each had discriminatory capacity (ROC AUC 0.67). Conclusion: In a group of multi-ethnic youth with diabetes, the MODY calculator correctly identified those with MODY but overestimated the probability for those with a clinical phenotype of T2D, likely due to young age at diagnosis and high proportion with positive family history of diabetes. Disclosure R.J. Kreienkamp: None. B. Shields: None. T.I. Pollin: None. M. Tosur: None. A.S. Shah: None. A.D. Liese: None. C. Pihoker: None. S. Srinivasan: None. A.T. Hattersley: None. M. Udler: Other Relationship; Up-To-Date. M.J. Redondo: None. Funding RJK is supported by NIH T32DK007699. SS is supported by NIH K23DK120932 and R03DK138213. MJR is supported by NIH NIDDK R01DK124395.
Kreienkamp et al. (Fri,) studied this question.