Insulin secretion improves in cystic fibrosis following ivacaftor correction of CFTR: a small pilot study

Melena D Bellin, Theresa Laguna, Janice Leschyshyn, Warren Regelmann, Jordan Dunitz, JoAnne Billings, Antoinette Moran, Melena D Bellin, Theresa Laguna, Janice Leschyshyn, Warren Regelmann, Jordan Dunitz, JoAnne Billings, Antoinette Moran

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether the cystic fibrosis (CF) transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is involved in human insulin secretion by assessing the metabolic impact of the new CFTR corrector-ivacaftor.

Methods: This open-label pilot study was conducted in CF patients with the G551D mutation given new prescriptions for ivacaftor. At baseline and 4 wk after daily ivacaftor therapy, intravenous glucose tolerance tests (IVGTT) and oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT) were performed.

Results: Five patients aged 6-52 were studied. After 1 month on ivacaftor, the insulin response to oral glucose improved by 66-178% in all subjects except one with long-standing diabetes. OGTT glucose levels were not lower in the two individuals with diabetes or the two with normal glucose tolerance (NGT), but the glucose tolerance category in the subject with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) improved to NGT after treatment. In response to intravenous glucose, the only patient whose acute insulin secretion did not improve had newly diagnosed, untreated CFRD. The others improved by 51-346%. Acute insulin secretion was partially restored in two subjects with no measurable acute insulin response at baseline, including the one with IGT and the one with long-standing diabetes.

Conclusions: This small pilot study suggests there is a direct role of CFTR in human insulin secretion. Larger, long-term longitudinal studies are necessary to determine whether early initiation of CFTR correction, particularly in young children with CF who have not yet lost considerable β-cell mass, will delay or prevent development of diabetes in this high-risk population.

Keywords: CFRD; CFTR; insulin secretion.

© 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
(A) Insulin secretion on oral glucose tolerance testing, displayed as the two hour area under the curve; and (B) insulin secretion on intravenous glucose tolerance testing, displayed as the acute insulin response to glucose measured from the area under the curve over 10 minutes following a dextrose bolus for 5 patients treated with ivacaftor. Open bars indicate pre-treatment values; checkered bars indicate results while on ivacaftor.

Source: PubMed

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