J Clin Invest. 2021 Jun 15;131(12). doi: 10.1172/JCI150022.
During progression to both types 1 and 2 diabetes (T1D, T2D), there is a striking loss of glucose-induced first-phase insulin release (FPIR), which is known to predict the onset of T1D. The contribution of reduced β cell mass to the onset of hyperglycemia remains unclear. In this issue of the JCI, Mezza et al. report on their study of patients with pancreatic neoplasms before and after partial pancreatectomy to evaluate the impact of reduced β cell mass on the development of diabetes. The authors found that reduced FPIR predicted diabetes when 50% of the pancreas was removed. These findings suggest that low or absent FPIR indicates that β cell mass can no longer compensate for increased insulin needs. Notably, clinicians may use reduction of FPIR as a warning that progression to T2D is underway.
在 1 型和 2 型糖尿病(T1D、T2D)进展过程中,葡萄糖诱导的第一时相胰岛素分泌(FPIR)明显丧失,这已知可预测 T1D 的发病。β 细胞量减少对高血糖发病的贡献仍不清楚。在本期 JCI 中,Mezza 等人报告了他们对胰腺肿瘤患者在部分胰腺切除前后的研究结果,以评估β 细胞量减少对糖尿病发病的影响。作者发现,当胰腺切除 50%时,减少的 FPIR 可预测糖尿病。这些发现表明,低或无 FPIR 表明β 细胞量已无法再补偿增加的胰岛素需求。值得注意的是,临床医生可能会将 FPIR 减少作为进展为 T2D 的警告。