Proinsulin secretion is a persistent feature of type 1 diabetes

EK Sims, HT Bahnson, J Nyalwidhe, L Haataja… - Diabetes …, 2019 - Am Diabetes Assoc
EK Sims, HT Bahnson, J Nyalwidhe, L Haataja, AK Davis, C Speake, LA DiMeglio, J Blum
Diabetes care, 2019Am Diabetes Assoc
OBJECTIVE Abnormally elevated proinsulin secretion has been reported in type 2 and early
type 1 diabetes when significant C-peptide is present. We questioned whether individuals
with long-standing type 1 diabetes and low or absent C-peptide secretory capacity retained
the ability to make proinsulin. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS C-peptide and
proinsulin were measured in fasting and stimulated sera from 319 subjects with long-
standing type 1 diabetes (≥ 3 years) and 12 control subjects without diabetes. We …
OBJECTIVE
Abnormally elevated proinsulin secretion has been reported in type 2 and early type 1 diabetes when significant C-peptide is present. We questioned whether individuals with long-standing type 1 diabetes and low or absent C-peptide secretory capacity retained the ability to make proinsulin.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
C-peptide and proinsulin were measured in fasting and stimulated sera from 319 subjects with long-standing type 1 diabetes (≥3 years) and 12 control subjects without diabetes. We considered three categories of stimulated C-peptide: 1) C-peptide positive, with high stimulated values ≥0.2 nmol/L; 2) C-peptide positive, with low stimulated values ≥0.017 but <0.2 nmol/L; and 3) C-peptide <0.017 nmol/L. Longitudinal samples were analyzed from C-peptide–positive subjects with diabetes after 1, 2, and 4 years.
RESULTS
Of individuals with long-standing type 1 diabetes, 95.9% had detectable serum proinsulin (>3.1 pmol/L), while 89.9% of participants with stimulated C-peptide values below the limit of detection (<0.017 nmol/L; n = 99) had measurable proinsulin. Proinsulin levels remained stable over 4 years of follow-up, while C-peptide decreased slowly during longitudinal analysis. Correlations between proinsulin with C-peptide and mixed-meal stimulation of proinsulin were found only in subjects with high stimulated C-peptide values (≥0.2 nmol/L). Specifically, increases in proinsulin with mixed-meal stimulation were present only in the group with high stimulated C-peptide values, with no increases observed among subjects with low or undetectable (<0.017 nmol/L) residual C-peptide.
CONCLUSIONS
In individuals with long-duration type 1 diabetes, the ability to secrete proinsulin persists, even in those with undetectable serum C-peptide.
Am Diabetes Assoc