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- Title
Weight Loss Improves β-Cell Function in People With Severe Obesity and Impaired Fasting Glucose: A Window of Opportunity.
- Authors
Rothberg, Amy E; Herman, William H; Wu, Chunyi; IglayReger, Heidi B; Horowitz, Jeffrey F; Burant, Charles F; Galecki, Andrzej T; Halter, Jeffrey B
- Abstract
<bold>Background: </bold>In people with obesity, β-cell function may adapt to insulin resistance. We describe β-cell function in people with severe obesity and normal fasting glucose (NFG), impaired fasting glucose (IFG), and type 2 diabetes (T2DM), as assessed before, 3 to 6 months after, and 2 years after medical weight loss to describe its effects on insulin sensitivity, insulin secretion, and β-cell function.<bold>Methods: </bold>Fifty-eight participants with body mass index (BMI) ≥ 35 kg/m2 (14 with NFG, 24 with IFG, and 20 with T2DM) and 13 normal weight participants with NFG underwent mixed meal tolerance tests to estimate insulin sensitivity (S[I]), insulin secretion (Φ), and β-cell function assessed as model-based Φ adjusted for S(I). All 58 obese participants were restudied at 3 to 6 months and 27 were restudied at 2 years.<bold>Results: </bold>At 3 to 6 months, after a 20-kg weight loss and a decrease in BMI of 6 kg/m2, S(I) improved in all obese participants, Φ decreased in obese participants with NFG and IFG and tended to decrease in obese participants with T2DM, and β-cell function improved in obese participants with NFG and tended to improve in obese participants with IFG. At 2 years, β-cell function deteriorated in participants with NFG and T2DM but remained significantly better in participants with IFG compared to baseline.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Short-term weight loss improves β-cell function in participants with NFG and IFG, but β-cell function tends to deteriorate over 2 years. In participants with IFG, weight loss improves longer-term β-cell function relative to baseline and likely relative to no intervention, suggesting that obese people with IFG are a subpopulation whose β-cell function is most likely to benefit from weight loss.
- Subjects
WEIGHT loss; OBESITY; TYPE 2 diabetes; GLUCOSE; INSULIN resistance; INSULIN aspart
- Publication
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2019, pN.PAG
- ISSN
0021-972X
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1210/clinem/dgz189