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Item #15
Lowered
Insulin Response May Predict Type 1 Diabetes
A
lowered first-phase insulin response could occur early in pre-diabetes
among young children at genetic and immunological risk for type 1
diabetes.
This lowered response implies
a rapid autoimmune destruction or loss of function of beta cells, say
Finnish researchers. It also suggests possible metabolic compensation
mechanisms, they added.
Although reduced insulin responses were considered a sign of
well-advanced deterioration of beta-cell function during the
development of type 1 diabetes, the researchers said, there were no
data on these responses at the onset of diabetes-related autoimmunity.
In this study, newborns were screened for HLA-DQB1-associated genetic
risk for Type 1 diabetes. Those found to be at increased risk were
followed up for the emergence of islet-cell antibodies. If these were
detected, autoantibodies to three other antigens (insulin, GAD65 and
IA-2) were measured too.
Fifty two children (aged 1 to 5 years) who had recently seroconverted
to islet-cell antibody positivity, underwent intravenous glucose
tolerance tests in order to measure first-phase insulin responses to
intravenous glucose.
The first-phase insulin response was subnormal in 22 of these children
(42.3%). Statistical analysis showed that islet-cell antibody of more
than 20 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation units, as well as insulin
autoantibodies and an increasing number of positive autoantibodies,
were independent predictors of low first-phase insulin response.
The researchers pointed out that 11 of the 22 high risk children
remained non-diabetic for a long time despite low insulin responses.
It was this, the researchers said, which suggested rapid autoimmune
destruction, loss of beta cell function and possible metabolic
compensation.
Diabetologia
2002;45:1639-1648
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