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OGTT Glucose Response Curves, Insulin Sensitivity, and β-Cell Function in RISE: Comparison Between Youth and Adults at Randomization and in Response to Interventions to Preserve β-Cell Function.

Citation
Arslanian, S. A., et al. “Ogtt Glucose Response Curves, Insulin Sensitivity, And Β-Cell Function In Rise: Comparison Between Youth And Adults At Randomization And In Response To Interventions To Preserve Β-Cell Function.”. Diabetes Care, pp. 817-825.
Center Indiana University University of Chicago University of Washington Yale University
Multicenter
Multicenter
Author Silva A Arslanian, Laure El Ghormli, Joon Young Kim, Ashley H Tjaden, Elena Barengolts, Sonia Caprio, Tamara S Hannon, Kieren J Mather, Kristen J Nadeau, Kristina M Utzschneider, Steven E Kahn, RISE Consortium
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We examined the glucose response curves (biphasic [BPh], monophasic [MPh], incessant increase [IIn]) during an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and their relationship to insulin sensitivity (IS) and β-cell function (βCF) in youth versus adults with impaired glucose tolerance or recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSThis was both a cross-sectional and a longitudinal evaluation of participants in the RISE study randomized to metformin alone for 12 months or glargine for 3 months followed by metformin for 9 months. At baseline/randomization, OGTTs (85 youth, 353 adults) were categorized as BPh, MPh, or IIn. The relationship of the glucose response curves to hyperglycemic clamp-measured IS and βCF at baseline and the change in glucose response curves 12 months after randomization were assessed.RESULTSAt randomization, the prevalence of the BPh curve was significantly higher in youth than adults (18.8% vs. 8.2%), with no differences in MPh or IIn. IS did not differ across glucose response curves in youth or adults. However, irrespective of curve type, youth had lower IS than adults ( < 0.05). βCF was lowest in IIn versus MPh and BPh in youth and adults ( < 0.05), yet compared with adults, youth had higher βCF in BPh and MPh ( < 0.005) but not IIn. At month 12, the change in glucose response curves did not differ between youth and adults, and there was no treatment effect.CONCLUSIONSDespite a twofold higher prevalence of the more favorable BPh curve in youth at randomization, RISE interventions did not result in beneficial changes in glucose response curves in youth compared with adults. Moreover, the typical β-cell hypersecretion in youth was not present in the IIn curve, emphasizing the severity of β-cell dysfunction in youth with this least favorable glucose response curve.

Year of Publication
2021
Journal
Diabetes care
Volume
44
Issue
3
Number of Pages
817-825
Date Published
03/2021
ISSN Number
1935-5548
DOI
10.2337/dc20-2134
Alternate Journal
Diabetes Care
PMID
33436401
PMCID
PMC7896250
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