Abstract

AimsThe Disposition Index (DI) is widely used in clinical studies of β-cell function. However, direct physiologic interpretation of the DI value and the inverse exponential slope relating insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity terms is difficult. We evaluated a linearization of the relationship that allows separate evaluation of the DI term and the slope. MethodsInsulin secretion and sensitivity indices were derived from standardized oral glucose tolerance testing, including commonly used terms and model-derived terms. The population included participants with normoglycemia, dysglycemia or Type 2 diabetes. Logarithmic transformation of the DI equation to linearize the secretion-sensitivity relationship was performed, and the resulting secretion-sensitivity relationships were evaluated using standard linear regression methods. ResultsSimple logarithmic transformation linearized the secretion-sensitivity relationships available from a variety of OGTT-derived metrics. In normoglycemic subjects the slopes approximated −1 in insulin-basedsecretion-sensitivity pairs, and approximated −0.6 in C-peptide based secretion-sensitivity pairs. Group differences in DI terms were observed as expected. These analyses also revealed differing secretion-sensitivity slopes, with IGT and T2D demonstrating progressively impaired coupling. ConclusionsLinearization of the secretion-sensitivity relationship provides simplified interpretation of the DI value and allows simple analysis and meaningful interpretation of the secretion-sensitivity slope. This linear relationship is amenable to standard statistical evaluations for comparisons of insulin secretion responses and of secretion-sensitivity coupling across groups.

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