Articolo in rivista, 2007, ENG, 10.1007/s00125-007-0819-5

Within-subject variability of measures of beta cell function derived from a 2 h OGTT: implications for research studies

Utzschneider KM.; Prigeon RL.; Tong J.; Gerchman F.; Carr DB.; Zraika S.; Udayasankar J.; Montgomery B.; Mari A.; Kahn SE.

1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10: Department of Medicine, Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA / 2: Division of Gerontology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA / 5: Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA / 9: Institute of Biomedical Engineering, National Research Council, Padua, Italy

Aims/hypothesis Knowledge of the within-subject variability of a parameter is required to properly design and calculate sample sizes for longitudinal studies. We sought to determine the day-to-day variability of measures of beta cell function derived from an OGTT. Methods Thirty-seven adults (13 with normal glucose tolerance, ten with impaired glucose tolerance, 14 with type 2 diabetes) underwent a standard 2 h 75 g OGTT on two separate days (median time between tests, 7 days; range, 5-14). From these data, the reproducibility of several indices of beta cell function were determined: insulinogenic index (?I0-30/?G0-30), early C-peptide response (?CP0-30/ ?G0-30), incremental AUC insulin to glucose response (incAUCins/incAUCglu), integrated insulin secretion response from 0 to 120 min (IS/Glu0-120) and indices of beta cell function derived from a mathematical model. Results Within-subject variability for ?I0-30/?G0-30 (CV 57.1%) was higher than ?CP0-30/?G0-30 (CV 34.7%). Measures integrated over the full 120 min of the OGTT, incAUCins/incAUCglu (CV 24.9%) and IS/Glu0-120 (CV 17.4%), demonstrated less variability. The mathematical model-derived measures of beta cell glucose sensitivity (CV 20.3%) and potentiation (CV 33.0%) showed moderate variability. The impact of the different measures' variability on sample size (30% change from baseline) is demonstrated by calculated sample sizes of 89 for ?I0-30/?G0-30, 37 for ?CP0-30/?G0-30, 21 for incAUCins/incAUCglu and 11 for IS/Glu0-120. Conclusions/interpretation Some OGTT-derived indices of beta cell function, in particular the insulinogenic index, demonstrate high within-subject variability. Integrated measures that utilise multiple time points and measures that use C-peptide show less variability and may lead to a reduced sample size requirement.

Diabetologia (Berl.) 50 (12), pp. 2516–2525

Keywords

CNR authors

Mari Andrea

CNR institutes

ISIB – Istituto di ingegneria biomedica

ID: 30407

Year: 2007

Type: Articolo in rivista

Creation: 2009-06-16 00:00:00.000

Last update: 2012-05-02 11:37:24.000

CNR authors

External links

OAI-PMH: Dublin Core

OAI-PMH: Mods

OAI-PMH: RDF

DOI: 10.1007/s00125-007-0819-5

External IDs

CNR OAI-PMH: oai:it.cnr:prodotti:30407

DOI: 10.1007/s00125-007-0819-5

ISI Web of Science (WOS): 000250721400014