Abstract

C-peptide is produced in equal amounts to insulin and is the best measure of endogenous insulin secretion in patients with diabetes. Measurement of insulin secretion using C-peptide can be helpful in clinical practice: differences in insulin secretion are fundamental to the different treatment requirements of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes. This article reviews the use of C-peptide measurement in the clinical management of patients with diabetes, including the interpretation and choice of C-peptide test and its use to assist diabetes classification and choice of treatment. We provide recommendations for where C-peptide should be used, choice of test and interpretation of results. With the rising incidence of Type 2 diabetes in younger patients, the discovery of monogenic diabetes and development of new therapies aimed at preserving insulin secretion, the direct measurement of insulin secretion may be increasingly important. Advances in assays have made C-peptide measurement both more reliable and inexpensive. In addition, recent work has demonstrated that C-peptide is more stable in blood than previously suggested or can be reliably measured on a spot urine sample (urine C-peptide:creatinine ratio), facilitating measurement in routine clinical practice. The key current clinical role of C-peptide is to assist classification and management of insulin-treated patients. Utility is greatest after 3–5 years from diagnosis when persistence of substantial insulin secretion suggests Type 2 or monogenic diabetes. Absent C-peptide at any time confirms absolute insulin requirement and the appropriateness of Type 1 diabetes management strategies regardless of apparent aetiology.

Highlights

  • C-peptide is produced in equal amounts to insulin and can be used to assess endogenous insulin secretion, including in patients who are insulin treated

  • Assessment of insulin secretion is potentially helpful in clinical practice: differences in glycaemic treatment requirements between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes mainly relate to the development of absolute insulin deficiency in the former

  • Keywords used in various combinations include C-peptide, diabetes, Type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes, maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY), diagnosis, classification, treatment, treatment outcome, insulin resistance, prognosis, glucagon test, mixedmeal test

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Summary

Introduction

C-peptide is produced in equal amounts to insulin and can be used to assess endogenous insulin secretion, including in patients who are insulin treated. Assessment of insulin secretion is potentially helpful in clinical practice: differences in glycaemic treatment requirements between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes mainly relate to the development of absolute insulin deficiency in the former. Changes in treatment requirement with time in Type 2 diabetes primarily relate to progressive loss of insulin secretion capacity. Despite this measurement of the underlying hormone in the clinical care of those with diabetes is infrequent. This article aims to review the current evidence on the role of the measurement of C-peptide in the management of those with diabetes. We have not addressed the use of C-peptide measurement in the assessment of hypoglycaemia aetiology and the potential therapeutic uses of C-peptide, which have been extensively reviewed elsewhere [1,2]

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