Residual β-cell function in Brazilian Type 1 diabetes after 3 years of diagnosis: prevalence and association with low presence of nephropathy

Diabetology & metabolic syndrome(2023)

Cited 0|Views16
No score
Abstract
Background Persistence of β cell-function in Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is associated with glycaemia stability and lower prevalence of microvascular complications. We aimed to assess the prevalence of residual C- peptide secretion in long-term Brazilian childhood onset T1D receiving usual diabetes care and its association to clinical, metabolic variables and microvascular complications. Methods A cross-sectional observational study with 138 T1D adults with ≥ 3 years from the diagnosis by routine diabetes care. Clinical, metabolic variables and microvascular complications were compared between positive ultra-sensitive fasting serum C-peptide (FCP +) and negative (FCP-) participants. Results T1D studied had ≥ 3 yrs. of diagnosis and 60% had FCP > 1.15 pmol/L. FCP + T1D were older at diagnosis (10 vs 8 y.o; p = 0.03) and had less duration of diabetes (11 vs 15 y.o; p = 0.002). There was no association between the FCP + and other clinical and metabolic variable but there was inversely association with microalbuminuria (28.6% vs 13.4%, p = 0.03), regardless of HbA 1c . FCP > 47 pmol/L were associated with nephropathy protection but were not related to others microvascular complications. Conclusion Residual insulin secretion is present in 60% of T1D with ≥ 3 years of diagnosis in routine diabetes care. FCP + was positively associated with age of diagnosis and negatively with duration of disease and microalbuminuria, regardless of HbA 1c .
More
Translated text
Key words
nephropathy,diabetes
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined