Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Cross-sectional and Longitudinal Analyses of Factors Contributing to the Progressive Loss of the β-cell Function in Type 2 Diabetes
Hitomi NakayamaTomoko KatoSatoshi NakayamaHiroh KakuKazuhisa MuraishiIchiro TokubuchiKento HaraTamotsu KatoNobuhiko WadaMunehisa TsurutaTsuyoshi OhkiKayo TanakaKenshi MitsuzakiYuji TajiriKentaro Yamada
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

2015 Volume 54 Issue 16 Pages 1971-1976

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Abstract

Objective Type 2 diabetes is a progressive disease characterized by insulin resistance and insulin secretory dysfunction. In this study, we assessed the factors contributing to an insulin secretory defect in type 2 diabetes patients.
Methods The subjects consisted of 382 patients with type 2 diabetes, aged 57±13 years. We estimated the β-cell function using 6-min post-glucagon increments in C-peptide (ΔCPR).
Results A significant inverse correlation was observed between the time since the diagnosis of diabetes and ΔCPR. A simple liner regression analysis showed that ΔCPR decreases at a rate of 0.056 ng/mL/year. According to a multiple regression model, body mass index (BMI) and log (triglyceride) were positively correlated with ΔCPR. Time since the diagnosis of diabetes, diabetes in 1st degree relatives, the presence of diabetic retinopathy, and HbA1c were inversely correlated with ΔCPR. In 50 patients who underwent the glucagon stimulation test twice, the ΔCPR decreased from 2.27±1.47 to 1.72±1.08 ng/mL over a period of 6.5±0.9 years. A multiple regression analysis revealed the BMI and fasting plasma glucose level to be significant contributing factors to the decline in ΔCPR.
Conclusion The duration of diabetes, a low BMI, genetic factors, and the presence of microangiopathy may be associated with β-cell dysfunction in diabetic patients. The observations in this study suggest that obese subjects showed a rapid decline in the β-cell function despite an initial high CPR response. Environmental factors causing insulin resistance and glucotoxicity may therefore be involved in progressive β-cell failure.

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© 2015 by The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
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