A meta-analysis assessed whether the
Ala45Thr polymorphism of the neurogenic differentiation 1 (
NEUROD1) gene is associated with increased risk of diabetes mellitus type 1 (T1D) or type 2 (T2D). Fourteen case-control studies were analyzed, including genotype data on 3,057 patients with diabetes (T1D
n=1,213, T2D
n=1,844) and 2,446 controls. Overall and race-specific summary odds ratios (ORs) were obtained with fixed and random effects models. The
Thr allele did not significantly increase the overall risk for T1D (OR 1.27 [0.94–1.71],
P=0.12) or T2D (OR 1.07 [0.90–1.28],
P=0.46). The
Thr allele conferred increased susceptibility in subjects of Asian racial descent to T1D (OR 1.88 [1.10–3.21],
P=0.020), but not to T2D (OR 1.08 [0.74–1.56],
P=0.70). There was no association in subjects of European descent (OR 0.97 [0.76–1.23],
P=0.80 for T1D; OR 1.03 [0.88–1.21],
P=0.68 for T2D). Larger studies seemed to show more conservative estimates for the association with T1D (
P=0.083). The
Ala45Thr polymorphism of the
NEUROD1 gene has no effect on susceptibility to T2D. It may however be a risk factor for susceptibility to T1D, in particular for subjects of Asian descent, although bias cannot be totally excluded.