Abstract
Diabetes Mellitus is a huge syndrome which can be detected from the first day of life until the last year of life of a centenarian. In the current classification of diabetes among the so-called "idiopathic phenotypes", apart Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) and Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) has been included provisionally term "Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults" (LADA). This has unclear characterization regarding the age at onset, the presence of anti-β-cell antibodies and the level of insulin secretory function, in conformity with C-peptide levels. According to several recent publications, there are no specific biochemical or genetic markers for Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults (LADA), but only a gradual transition from T1D to T2D. In addition, the word "latent" in the construction of "LADA" term is inaccurate because in this phenotype nothing is latent: both the autoimmunity and diabetes are present and are even parts of the diagnosis. So that, the best term should be what in reality this sub-phenotype is: an Intermediary Diabetes Mellitus (IDM). Some recent genetic data strongly support this designation.