Skip to main content

Study: Insulin production found among those with long-term Type 1 diabetes

2/22/2012

BOSTON — It seems insulin production and beta cell functioning may persist despite the onset of Type 1 diabetes, according to research conducted at the Massachusetts General Hospital and published in the March issue of Diabetes Care.


Researchers evaluated blood samples of 182 individuals with Type 1 diabetes using an ultrasensitive assay for C-peptide, a marker of insulin secretion, to test for residual beta cell function. What they discovered was that although C-peptide levels were lower among those who had longer duration of diabetes; however, the decrease over time was gradual, compared with the predicted abrupt decline that typically is associated with Type 1 diabetes. For example, among patients with disease duration of 31 to 40 years, 10% still produced C-peptide. What's more, beta cell functioning remained intact at very low C-peptide levels.


"Traditionally, it was thought that beta cell function completely ceased in patients with advanced Type 1 diabetes. However, data from this study and others suggest that the pancreas continues to function at some level even decades after the onset of Type 1 diabetes," said Denise Faustman, director of the MGH Immunobiology Laboratory, who led the study.




Interested in this topic? Sign up for our weekly Collaborative Care e-newsletter.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds