Panero Francesco, Novelli Giulia, Zucco Chiara, Fornengo Paolo, Perotto Massimo, Segre Olivia, Grassi Giorgio, Cavallo-Perin Paolo, Bruno Graziella
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Turin, Turin, Italy.
Diabetes Care. 2009 Feb;32(2):301-5. doi: 10.2337/dc08-1241. Epub 2008 Nov 18.
A protective effect of residual beta-cell function on microvascular complications of type 1 diabetes has been suggested. Our aim was to retrospectively evaluate the association of fasting plasma C-peptide values with micro- and macrovascular complications.
We recruited a clinic-based cohort of 471 type 1 diabetic patients born after 1945 and cared for in the period 1994-2004. Centralized measurements and standardized procedures of ascertainment of micro- and macrovascular complications were employed. Individual cumulative averages of A1C up to 2007 were calculated.
Residual beta-cell secretion was detected even many years after diabetes diagnosis. In multivariate linear regression analysis, fasting plasma C-peptide values were positively associated with age at diagnosis (beta = 0.02; P < 0.0001) and triglycerides (beta = 0.20; P = 0.05) and inversely associated with diabetes duration (beta = -0.03; P < 0.0001) and HDL cholesterol (beta = -0.006; P = 0.03). The final model explained 21% of fasting C-peptide variability. With respect to fasting C-peptide values in the lowest tertile (<0.06 nmol/l), higher values were associated with lower prevalence of microvascular complications (odds ratio [OR] 0.59 [95% CI 0.37-0.94]) independently of age, sex, diabetes duration, individual cumulative A1C average during the study period, hypertension, and cardiovascular diseases. No association was evident with macrovascular complications (0.77 [0.38-1.58]).
Our study shows an independent protective effect of residual beta-cell function on the development of microvascular complications in type 1 diabetes, suggesting the potential beneficial effect of treatment that allows the preservation of even modest beta-cell function over time.
已有研究提示残余β细胞功能对1型糖尿病微血管并发症具有保护作用。我们的目的是回顾性评估空腹血浆C肽值与微血管及大血管并发症之间的关联。
我们招募了一个基于诊所的队列,其中包括471例1945年后出生且在1994 - 2004年期间接受治疗的1型糖尿病患者。采用集中测量和标准化程序来确定微血管及大血管并发症。计算了截至2007年的个体A1C累积平均值。
即使在糖尿病诊断多年后仍检测到残余β细胞分泌。在多变量线性回归分析中,空腹血浆C肽值与诊断时年龄呈正相关(β = 0.02;P < 0.0001)以及与甘油三酯呈正相关(β = 0.20;P = 0.05),而与糖尿病病程呈负相关(β = -0.03;P < 0.0001)以及与高密度脂蛋白胆固醇呈负相关(β = -0.006;P = 0.03)。最终模型解释了空腹C肽变异性的21%。相对于空腹C肽值处于最低三分位数(<0.06 nmol/l)的情况,较高的值与微血管并发症患病率较低相关(比值比[OR] 0.59 [95%可信区间0.37 - 0.94]),且独立于年龄、性别、糖尿病病程、研究期间个体累积A1C平均值、高血压和心血管疾病。与大血管并发症无明显关联(0.77 [0.38 - 1.58])。
我们的研究显示残余β细胞功能对1型糖尿病微血管并发症的发生具有独立保护作用,提示随着时间推移保留适度β细胞功能的治疗可能具有潜在益处。