An understanding of the natural history of beta cell responses is an essential prerequisite for interventional studies designed
to prevent or treat type 1 diabetes. Here we review published data on changes in insulin responses in humans with type 1 diabetes.
We also describe a new analysis of C-peptide responses in subjects who are at risk of type 1 diabetes and enrolled in the
Diabetes Prevention Trial-1 (DPT-1). C-peptide responses to a mixed meal increase during childhood and through adolescence,
but show no significant change during adult life; responses are lower in adults who progress to diabetes than in those who
do not. The age-related increase in C-peptide responses may account for the higher levels of C-peptide observed in adults
with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes compared withhose in children and adolescents. Based on these findings, we propose a
revised model of the natural history of the disease, in which an age-related increase in functional beta cell responses before
the onset of autoimmune beta cell damage is an important determinant of the clinical features of the disease.
Keywords Autoimmunity - C-peptide - Insulin secretion - Natural history - Type 1 diabetes