Simple modeling allows prediction of steady-state glucose disposal rate from early data in hyperinsulinemic glucose clamps

Author:

Singal Pooja1,Muniyappa Ranganath2,Chisholm Robin1,Hall Gail2,Chen Hui2,Quon Michael J.2,Mather Kieren J.1

Affiliation:

1. Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana; and

2. Diabetes Unit, National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

Abstract

After a constant insulin infusion is initiated, determination of steady-state conditions for glucose infusion rates (GIR) typically requires ≥3 h. The glucose infusion follows a simple time-dependent rise, reaching a plateau at steady state. We hypothesized that nonlinear fitting of abbreviated data sets consisting of only the early portion of the clamp study can provide accurate estimates of steady-state GIR. Data sets from two independent laboratories were used to develop and validate this approach. Accuracy of the predicted steady-state GDR was assessed using regression analysis and Altman-Bland plots, and precision was compared by applying a calibration model. In the development data set ( n = 88 glucose clamp studies), fitting the full data set with a simple monoexponential model predicted reference GDR values with good accuracy (difference between the 2 methods −0.37 mg·kg−1·min−1) and precision [root mean square error (RMSE) = 1.11], validating the modeling procedure. Fitting data from the first 180 or 120 min predicted final GDRs with comparable accuracy but with progressively reduced precision [fitGDR-180 RMSE = 1.27 ( P = NS vs. fitGDR-full); fitGDR-120 RMSE = 1.56 ( P < 0.001)]. Similar results were obtained with the validation data set ( n = 183 glucose clamp studies), confirming the generalizability of this approach. The modeling approach also derives kinetic parameters that are not available from standard approaches to clamp data analysis. We conclude that fitting a monoexponential curve to abbreviated clamp data produces steady-state GDR values that accurately predict the GDR values obtained from the full data sets, albeit with reduced precision. This approach may help reduce the resources required for undertaking clamp studies.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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