Fall in C-Peptide During First 2 Years From Diagnosis: Evidence of at Least Two Distinct Phases From Composite Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet Data

Publication Description
Interpretation of clinical trials to alter the decline in β-cell function after diagnosis of type 1 diabetes depends on a robust understanding of the natural history of disease. Combining data from the Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet studies, we describe the natural history of β-cell function from shortly after diagnosis through 2 years post study randomization, assess the degree of variability between patients, and investigate factors that may be related to C-peptide preservation or loss. We found that 93% of individuals have detectable C-peptide 2 years from diagnosis. In 11% of subjects, there was no significant fall from baseline by 2 years. There was a biphasic decline in C-peptide; the C-peptide slope was -0.0245 pmol/mL/month (95% CI -0.0271 to -0.0215) through the first 12 months and -0.0079 (-0.0113 to -0.0050) from 12 to 24 months (P < 0.001). This pattern of fall in C-peptide over time has implications for understanding trial results in which effects of therapy are most pronounced early and raises the possibility that there are time-dependent differences in pathophysiology. The robust data on the C-peptide obtained under clinical trial conditions should be used in planning and interpretation of clinical trials.

Primary Author
GREENBAUM,Carla J.
BEAM,Craig A.
KRAUSE-STEINRAUF,Heidi
SKYLER,Jay S.
SOSENKO,Jay M.
BOULWARE,David
GITELMAN,Stephen E.
GOTTLIEB,Peter A.
HEROLD,Kevan C.
LACHIN,John M.
MCGEE,Paula
PALMER,Jerry P.
PESCOVITZ,Mark D.

Volume
61

Issue
8

Start Page
2066

Other Pages
2073

Publisher
American Diabetes Association

URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22688329

PMID
22688329



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Diabetes (New York, N.Y.)

Publication Year
2012

Place of Publication
Alexandria, VA

ISSN/ISBN
0012-1797

Document Object Index
10.2337/db11-1538