Serum Visfatin Increases With Progressive β-Cell Deterioration

Author:

López-Bermejo Abel12,Chico-Julià Berta12,Fernàndez-Balsells Mercè12,Recasens Mònica12,Esteve Eduardo12,Casamitjana Roser3,Ricart Wifredo12,Fernández-Real José-Manuel12

Affiliation:

1. Diabetes, Endocrinology and Nutrition Unit, Dr. Josep Trueta Hospital, Girona, Spain

2. Girona Institute for Biomedical Research, Girona, Spain

3. Endocrine Laboratory, University Clinical Hospital, Barcelona, Spain

Abstract

Visfatin has shown to be increased in type 2 diabetes but to be unrelated to insulin sensitivity. We hypothesized that visfatin is associated with insulin secretion in humans. To this aim, a cross-sectional study was conducted in 118 nondiabetic men and 64 (35 men and 29 women) type 2 diabetic patients. Type 1 diabetic patients with long-standing disease (n = 58; 31 men and 27 women) were also studied. In nondiabetic subjects, circulating visfatin (enzyme immunoassay) was independently associated with insulin secretion (acute insulin response to glucose [AIRg] from intravenous glucose tolerance tests) but not with insulin sensitivity (Si) or other metabolic or anthropometric parameters, and AIRg alone explained 8% of visfatin variance (β = −0.29, P = 0.001). Circulating visfatin was increased in type 2 diabetes (mean 18 [95% CI 16–21] vs. 15 ng/ml [13–17] for type 2 diabetic and nondiabetic subjects, respectively; P = 0.017, adjusted for sex, age, and BMI), although this association was largely attenuated after accounting for HbA1c (A1C). Finally, circulating visfatin was found to be increased in patients with long-standing type 1 diabetes, even after adjusting for A1C values (37 ng/ml [34–40]; P < 0.0001, adjusted for sex, age, BMI, and A1C compared with either type 2 diabetic or nondiabetic subjects). In summary, circulating visfatin is increased with progressive β-cell deterioration. The study of the regulation and role of visfatin in diabetes merits further consideration.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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