Volume 45, Number 12, 1639-1648, DOI: 10.1007/s00125-002-0981-8

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European Association for the Study of Diabetes

First-phase insulin response in young healthy children at genetic and immunological risk for Type I diabetes

P. Keskinen, S. Korhonen, A. Kupila, R. Veijola, S. Erkkilä, H. Savolainen, P. Arvilommi, T. Simell, J. Ilonen and M. Knip, et al.

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Abstract

Abstract
Aims/hypothesis. A reduced first-phase insulin response to intravenous glucose is perceived as a sign of far-advanced deterioration of beta-cell function during the development of Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus, but data on insulin responses at the onset of diabetes-related autoimmunity are lacking. We studied the first-phase insulin responses of small children soon after observed seroconversion to autoantibody positivity.
Methods. In the Type I Diabetes Prediction and Prevention Study newborn infants are screened for HLA-DQB1-associated genetic risk for Type I diabetes and those with increased risk are followed-up for the emergence of islet-cell antibodies. If antibodies are detected, autoantibodies to three other antigens (insulin, GAD65 and IA-2) are also measured. To measure first-phase insulin responses, intravenous glucose tolerance tests were carried out in 52 (1 to 5-year-old) children who had recently seroconverted to islet-cell antibody positivity.
Results. The first-phase insulin response was subnormal (<38 mU/l, the 5th percentile of insulin responses of 20 islet-cell antibody negative healthy children at this age) in 22 of the 52 children (42%). Stepwise multiregression analysis showed that islet-cell antibody greater than 20 JDFU (p=0.0005), insulin autoantibodies (p=0.0009) and an increasing number of positive autoantibodies (p=0.0011) were independent predictors of low first-phase insulin response.
Conclusion/interpretation. A decreased first-phase insulin response could be an early phenomenon in the course of prediabetes in young children, implying a rapid autoimmune destruction or loss of function of beta cells as well as possible metabolic compensation mechanisms, since 11 out of the 22 high risk children remain nondiabetic for a considerable period of time despite low insulin responses.

Autoantibodies HLA risk markers insulin secretion prediabetic state Type I diabetes

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