Circulating C-Peptide Levels in Living Children and Young People and Pancreatic β-Cell Loss in Pancreas Donors Across Type 1 Diabetes Disease Duration

Author:

Carr Alice L.J.1ORCID,Inshaw Jamie R.J.2,Flaxman Christine S.1,Leete Pia1,Wyatt Rebecca C.1,Russell Lydia A.1,Palmer Matthew1,Prasolov Dmytro1,Worthington Thomas1,Hull Bethany1,Wicker Linda S.2,Dunger David B.3ORCID,Oram Richard A.1ORCID,Morgan Noel G.1ORCID,Todd John A.24,Richardson Sarah J.1ORCID,Besser Rachel E.J.24

Affiliation:

1. 1Institute of Biomedical and Clinical Science, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, U.K

2. 2JDRF/Wellcome Diabetes and Inflammation Laboratory, Wellcome Centre for Human Genetics, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K

3. 3Department of Paediatrics, Addenbrooke's Hospital, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, U.K.

4. 4National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, U.K

Abstract

C-peptide declines in type 1 diabetes, although many long-duration patients retain low, but detectable levels. Histological analyses confirm that β-cells can remain following type 1 diabetes onset. We explored the trends observed in C-peptide decline in the UK Genetic Resource Investigating Diabetes (UK GRID) cohort (N = 4,079), with β-cell loss in pancreas donors from the network for Pancreatic Organ donors with Diabetes (nPOD) biobank and the Exeter Archival Diabetes Biobank (EADB) (combined N = 235), stratified by recently reported age at diagnosis endotypes (<7, 7–12, ≥13 years) across increasing diabetes durations. The proportion of individuals with detectable C-peptide declined beyond the first year after diagnosis, but this was most marked in the youngest age group (<1-year duration: age <7 years: 18 of 20 [90%], 7–12 years: 107 of 110 [97%], ≥13 years: 58 of 61 [95%] vs. 1–5 years postdiagnosis: <7 years: 172 of 522 [33%], 7–12 years: 604 of 995 [61%], ≥13 years: 225 of 289 [78%]). A similar profile was observed in β-cell loss, with those diagnosed at younger ages experiencing more rapid loss of islets containing insulin-positive (insulin+) β-cells <1 year postdiagnosis: age <7 years: 23 of 26 (88%), 7–12 years: 32 of 33 (97%), ≥13 years: 22 of 25 (88%) vs. 1–5 years postdiagnosis: <7 years: 1 of 12 (8.3%), 7–12 years: 7 of 13 (54%), ≥13 years: 7 of 8 (88%). These data should be considered in the planning and interpretation of intervention trials designed to promote β-cell retention and function.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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