Aims/hypothesis
The prevalence of altered glucose metabolism in obese children and adolescents is growing at a significant rate, especially
in ethnic minorities. It is not clear whether young people of different ethnic backgrounds differ in their adaptive mechanisms
to obesity-related insulin resistance. The aim of this study was to evaluate the early insulin response and insulin clearance
in response to an oral glucose load in obese children and adolescents.
Methods
Seven hundred and nine obese children and adolescents underwent an OGTT. Indices of the early insulin response and insulin
clearance were compared in participants of White European, African American and Hispanic origin.
Results
Participants of the three ethnic groups demonstrated similar mechanisms of adaptation to increasing insulin resistance, but
with different magnitudes. African American subjects had a greater early insulin response and decreased insulin clearance
than their White European and Hispanic counterparts. This happened regardless of whether the cohort was divided by glucose
tolerance level or by level of insulin sensitivity. IGT across ethnic groups was characterised by a marked decline in the
acute insulin response in the context of severe insulin resistance and very low insulin clearance.
Conclusions/interpretation
In obese children and adolescents, mechanisms of adaptation to obesity related to insulin resistance are similar across ethnic
groups. The greater early insulin response needed to maintain glucose tolerance in young people of ethnic minorities may partially
explain their greater tendency to develop type 2 diabetes.
Keywords Ethnic - Insulin clearance - Insulin response - Insulin sensitivity - Obesity