Abstract

BackgroundCystic Fibrosis (CF) patients historically suffered from undernutrition, infection and inflammation. Insulin insufficiency-related protein catabolism further compromised health. We aimed to determine whether insulin improves protein catabolism in CF youth with abnormal glucose tolerance (AGT). MethodsThis double-masked, placebo-controlled trial in CF youth age 10–25 with AGT who were in their usual state of health used triple-tracer stable-isotope methodology to measure protein turnover during a baseline test meal and after four weeks of insulin/placebo treatment. Healthy controls were assessed once. CF patients were randomized 1:1:1 to once-daily long-acting insulin (0.25 U/kg/d), three-times daily rapid-acting insulin (0.5 U/15gr carbohydrate), or injectable placebo. ResultsThirty CF patients completed the study. There were no differences in any measure of protein turnover between insulin- and placebo-treated subjects, including endogenous protein breakdown (primary study endpoint). In contrast to earlier studies, protein turnover in the 37 CF patients who completed the baseline meal was normal compared to 20 healthy controls. Meal isotope appeared in plasma earlier in CF than controls, suggesting more rapid gut emptying. The study was interrupted by the pandemic; futility analysis led to study discontinuation before the planned remaining 15 CF patients were studied. ConclusionsRecent advances in CF have led to remarkable clinical improvements. In this study, CF youth with AGT had normal protein catabolism at baseline. Pre-meal or daily basal insulin therapy, while safe and well tolerated, did not significantly enhance protein turnover and does not appear to be necessary in clinically stable patients prior to development of CFRD.

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