Abstract
BackgroundThe hyperglycemic clamp test, the gold standard of beta cell function, predicts impending type 1 diabetes in islet autoantibody-positive individuals, but the latter may benefit from less invasive function tests such as the proinsulin:C-peptide ratio (PI:C). The present study aims to optimize precision of PI:C measurements by automating a dual-label trefoil-type time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay (TT-TRFIA), and to compare its diagnostic performance for predicting type 1 diabetes with that of clamp-derived C-peptide release.MethodsBetween-day imprecision (n = 20) and split-sample analysis (n = 95) were used to compare TT-TRFIA (AutoDelfia, Perkin-Elmer) with separate methods for proinsulin (in-house TRFIA) and C-peptide (Elecsys, Roche). High-risk multiple autoantibody-positive first-degree relatives (n = 49; age 5–39) were tested for fasting PI:C, HOMA2-IR and hyperglycemic clamp and followed for 20–57 months (interquartile range).ResultsTT-TRFIA values for proinsulin, C-peptide and PI:C correlated significantly (r2 = 0.96–0.99; P<0.001) with results obtained with separate methods. TT-TRFIA achieved better between-day %CV for PI:C at three different levels (4.5–7.1 vs 6.7–9.5 for separate methods). In high-risk relatives fasting PI:C was significantly and inversely correlated (rs = -0.596; P<0.001) with first-phase C-peptide release during clamp (also with second phase release, only available for age 12–39 years; n = 31), but only after normalization for HOMA2-IR. In ROC- and Cox regression analysis, HOMA2-IR-corrected PI:C predicted 2-year progression to diabetes equally well as clamp-derived C-peptide release.ConclusionsThe reproducibility of PI:C benefits from the automated simultaneous determination of both hormones. HOMA2-IR-corrected PI:C may serve as a minimally invasive alternative to the more tedious hyperglycemic clamp test.
Highlights
There is growing consensus that immune interventions in type 1 diabetes should concentrate on the presymptomatic disease phase [1,2,3]
TT-TRFIA values for proinsulin, C-peptide and peptide ratio (PI):C correlated significantly (r2 = 0.96–0.99; P
We recently reported that detection of a decreased first- or second phase C-peptide release during hyperglycemic clamp–the gold standard for beta cell function assessment [7, 8]–could serve this purpose, when applied in individuals positive for autoantibodies directed against IA-2 (IA-2A) or zinc transporter 8 (ZnT8A) [9,10,11,12]
Summary
Data Availability Statement: All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information file (excel document). The present study aims to optimize precision of PI:C measurements by automating a dual-label trefoil-type timeresolved fluorescence immunoassay (TT-TRFIA), and to compare its diagnostic performance for predicting type 1 diabetes with that of clamp-derived C-peptide release
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