Abstract
It is commonly accepted that insulin secretion follows the pattern of an inverted
U, also termed ‘Starling's curve of the pancreas’ during the natural history of hyperglycemia
in glucose intolerance and type 2 diabetes. This concept is based on the cross-sectional
observation that insulin concentrations initially increase when insulin sensitivity
declines (as a consequence of obesity, for example) and decrease when glucose tolerance
deteriorates (impaired glucose tolerance or overt type 2 diabetes). The initial increase
in insulin concentrations has been viewed as ‘hypersecretion’ of insulin, thought
to indicate that beta cell dysfunction is not etiological but secondary in nature.
However, this view is oblivious to the now well-established fact that assessment of
insulin secretion must account for individual insulin sensitivity. Here, we revisit
the concept of Starling's curve of the pancreas based on first-phase C-peptide concentrations
(hyperglycemic clamp) from subjects with normal glucose tolerance (n = 66), impaired
glucose tolerance (n = 19) and mild type 2 diabetes (n = 9). In absolute terms, first-phase
C-peptide concentrations plotted against increasing fasting glucose concentrations
indeed followed an inverted U. However, adjusted for direct and indirect measures
of insulin sensitivity (insulin sensitivity index from the hyperglycemic clamp, body
mass index, age and sex), first-phase C-peptide concentrations of the same individuals
tended to decrease steadily. In conclusion, while the Starling curve exists for insulin
concentrations, and perhaps also for insulin secretion, it does not hold for beta-cell
function if that term were to imply appropriateness of insulin secretion (based on
a formal test of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion) for the degree of insulin resistance,
as it should.
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Dr. M. Stumvoll
Medizinische Universitätsklinik
Otfried-Müller-Str. 10 · 72076 Tübingen · Germany ·
Phone: + 49 (7071) 298-2711
Fax: + 49 (7071) 295-277
Email: michael.stumvoll@med.uni-tuebingen.de