Pancreatic triacylglycerol reduction may improve type 2 diabetes insulin response
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In patients with type 2 diabetes, reductions in pancreatic triacylglycerol during weight loss are related to diabetes itself and not only decreased total body fat, according to study findings.
“Type 2 diabetes can now be seen to be a simple condition of fat excess specifically affecting the pancreas,” Roy Taylor, MD, FRCP, professor of medicine and metabolism at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom, told Endocrine Today. “Previously, the poor insulin secretion in [type 2 diabetes] was a bit of a mystery, with suggestions of separate disease processes, such as amyloid deposition, mitochondrial dysfunction, intracellular signaling problems or insulin resistance. But if a person has type 2 diabetes, they simply have more fat on board than their body can cope with.”
Roy Taylor
Taylor and colleagues evaluated 18 adults with type 2 diabetes and nine age- and weight-matched controls with normal glucose tolerance to determine whether decreases in pancreatic triacylglycerol during weight loss in type 2 diabetes is reflective of whole-body fat or specific to diabetes. Researchers also sought to determine whether the decrease was associated with recovery of insulin secretory function. Participants were evaluated before and 8 weeks after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery.
Similar weight loss and change in total body fat content were found between the two groups 8 weeks after surgery.
The diabetes group had higher pancreatic triacylglycerol content compared with controls before surgery (P = .009), but that amount decreased to levels similar to those seen in controls 8 weeks after surgery (P = .007); no change in pancreatic triacylglycerol levels was found among controls 8 weeks after surgery.
The first-phase insulin response (baseline to 6-minute insulin secretion rate) was found to be severely impaired among the diabetes group before surgery but was markedly restored after surgery (P = .005); no change in the first-phase insulin response was found among controls after surgery.
“At diagnosis, [type 2 diabetes] should not be said to be an irreversible, inevitably progressive disease,” Taylor told Endocrine Today. “If a person is sufficiently motivated to get rid of it, they can, and such very well-motivated individuals do well. However, there is another step needed before this is taken into routine clinical practice for all comers — the DiRECT (Diabetes Remission Clinical Trial) [study] will tell us whether, when applied to all, the outcomes are better after 2 years. ... Also, detailed work on how the fat can be blocked from getting into the pancreas will be helpful, especially as this could lead to development of drugs which might specifically reverse [type 2 diabetes].” – by Amber Cox
Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.