Volume 47, Number 7, 1157-1166, DOI: 10.1007/s00125-004-1454-z

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European Association for the Study of Diabetes

Loss of beta cell function as fasting glucose increases in the non-diabetic range

I. F. Godsland, J. A. R. Jeffs and D. G. Johnston

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Abstract

Aims/hypothesis  

Our aim was to define the level of glycaemia at which pancreatic insulin secretion, particularly first-phase insulin release, begins to decline.

Methods  

Plasma glucose and insulin concentrations were measured during an IVGTT in 553 men with non-diabetic fasting plasma glucose concentrations. In 466 of the men C-peptide was also estimated. IVGTT insulin secretion in first and late phases was assessed by: (i) the circulating insulin response; (ii) population parameter deconvolution analysis of plasma C-peptide concentrations; and (iii) a combined model utilising both insulin and C-peptide concentrations. Measurements of insulin sensitivity and elimination were also derived by modelling analysis.

Results  

As fasting plasma glucose (FPG) increased, IVGTT first-phase insulin secretion declined by 73%, 71% and 68% for the three methods respectively. The FPG values at which this decline began, determined by change point regression, were 4.97, 5.16 and 5.42 mmol/l respectively. The sensitivity of late-phase insulin secretion to glucose declined at FPG concentrations above 6.0 mmol/l. Insulin elimination, but not insulin sensitivity, varied with FPG.

Conclusions/interpretation  

The range of FPG over which progressive loss of the first-phase response begins may be as low as 5.0 to 5.4 mmol/l, with late-phase insulin responses declining at FPG concentrations above 6.0 mmol/l.

Keywords  Beta cell function - Fasting plasma glucose - Insulin secretion - Insulin sensitivity - Modelling analysis

In the course of this work, our colleague and co-author James Jeffs died unexpectedly after a short illness. His contribution will be greatly missed.

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