Abstract

To identify baseline determinants of diabetes remission in response to short-term insulin-based therapy. In this study, adult patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) of less than 7 years duration were randomized to 8 weeks of treatment with (a) insulin glargine, (b) glargine + thrice-daily lispro, or (c) glargine + twice-daily exenatide, followed by 12 weeks of washout that enabled assessment of remission (defined as HbA1c < 6.5% after ≥ 3 months without glucose-lowering therapy). At baseline, 8 weeks and washout, beta-cell function was assessed with four measures: Insulin Secretion-Sensitivity Index-2 (ISSI-2), insulinogenic index/Homeostatic Model Assessment for Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR), ΔC-peptide0-120 /Δglucose0-120 × Matsuda and Δinsulin secretion rate (ISR)0-120 /Δgluc0-120 × Matsuda. Diabetes remission was achieved in 31 of 90 participants (34.4%). Compared with their peers, those who went on to remission had lower HbA1c (P < .001) and better beta-cell function at baseline (all four measures P ≤ .01). The non-remission and remission groups did not otherwise differ in baseline insulin sensitivity/resistance (Matsuda, HOMA-IR), body mass index, duration of diabetes, pretrial diabetes medications or allocated insulin-based therapy during the trial. On logistic regression analyses, each baseline measure of beta-cell function emerged as a significant predictor of remission (log ISSI-2: adjusted OR 4.41 [95% CI: 1.71-11.34]; log insulinogenic index/HOMA-IR: 2.21 [1.26-3.89]; log ΔC-peptide0-120 /Δglucose0-120 × Matsuda: 1.62 [1.00-2.64]; log ΔISR0-120 /Δgluc0-120 × Matsuda: 1.87 [1.09-3.23]). Similarly, higher baseline ISSI-2 tertile predicted longer time to glycaemic relapse after cessation of the insulin-based therapy (log-rank P = .029). Beta-cell function is the dominant baseline pathophysiological determinant of the likelihood of achieving remission of diabetes in response to short-term insulin-based therapy.

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