This is a single-center, prospective, randomized, controlled (crossover) clinical study designed to investigate the specific dose-response impact of insulin infusion rate (IIR) on blood glucose levels during a pancreatic clamp study. The investigators will recruit participants with a history of overweight/obesity and evidence of insulin resistance (i.e., fasting hyperinsulinemia plus prediabetes and/or impaired fasting glucose and/or Homeostasis Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance \[HOMA-IR\] score \>=2.73), and with evidence of, or clinically judged to be at high risk for, uncomplicated non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Participants will undergo two pancreatic clamp procedures in which individualized basal IIR are identified, followed in one by maintenance of basal IIR (maintenance hyperinsulinemia, MH) and in the other by a stepped decline in IIR (reduction toward euinsulinemia, RE). In both clamps the investigators will closely monitor plasma glucose and various metabolic parameters. The primary outcome will be the absolute and relative changes in steady-state plasma glucose levels at each stepped decline in IIR.
Although high blood sugar and risk of heart disease are the most well-known health effects of type 2 diabetes (T2DM), nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), in which too much fat accumulates in the liver, has come to be recognized as another important complication. Unchecked, NAFLD can progress to severe liver inflammation, liver failure, and even liver cancer. The investigators suspect that high levels of the blood sugar-lowering hormone insulin leads to excessive fat production by the liver, and so lowering insulin levels might help to improve NAFLD. In order to answer this question, the investigators will recruit people at risk for T2DM and NAFLD to perform a "pancreatic clamp" - a procedure in which the body's production of insulin is temporarily shut off and then replaced at the same or lower levels. Again, the investigators expect that lowering insulin levels will lower fat production. Because this is a new research approach, the investigators first need to understand how lowering insulin levels affects blood sugar. Research participants in this pilot study will therefore undergo two pancreatic clamps in random order: one roughly maintaining their own internal ("basal") insulin level and one in which the investigators lower that basal insulin level by up to 50%. In each case, the investigators will observe the absolute and relative changes in blood sugar and the levels of certain fats as the investigators change the insulin level. Once the investigators have found a lower insulin level that they can safely maintain, the investigators will go on to study its effect on fat production in a later study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
18
Insulin infusion rate (IIR) will be determined empirically first to maintain mean basal fasting plasma glucose, and then either maintained at the basal rate (MH protocol) or be reduced stepwise toward euinsulinemia (RE protocol).
Octreotide will be infused at 30 ng/kg/min to suppress endogenous insulin, glucagon, and growth hormone secretion. Co-administered with glucagon and rhGH.
Glucagon will be replaced at a constant rate of up to 0.65 ng/kg/min to maintain baseline counterregulatory response. Co-administered with octreotide and rhGH.
Recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH) will be replaced at a constant rate of up to 3 ng/kg/min to maintain baseline counterregulatory response. Co-administered with octreotide and glucagon.
Stable isotope tracer administered to calculate glucose kinetics during pancreatic clamp.
20% D-glucose (aq) (D20W) will be administered to counteract hypoglycemia or strongly downward blood glucose trends, as needed.
Nutritional supplement will be administered to provide three standardized "mixed meals" on the day before the pancreatic clamp.
Energy bar used as a standardized snack on the day before the pancreatic clamp.
Syringe pump used for highly precise administration of insulin, octreotide/glucagon/rhGH, and D20W (as needed) even at low infusion rates.
Glucose oxidase analyzer used to detect plasma glucose levels at the point of care. YSI have been the gold standard in clamp studies for many years. Two machines will run in parallel to ensure accuracy of results.
Columbia University Irving Medical Center
New York, New York, United States
Plasma glucose (absolute values) (units: mg/dL)
Goal is first to clamp insulin infusion rate to maintain mean basal fasting plasma glucose during the basal titration phase, and then during the intervention phase to observe the glucose levels that result from altering the basal IIR.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure.
Plasma glucose (relative/change) (units: fold difference and/or ∆mg/dL relative to previous time points)
Goal is first to clamp insulin infusion rate to maintain mean basal fasting plasma glucose during the basal titration phase, and then during the intervention phase to observe the impact of altering the basal IIR on glycemia.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure.
Serum insulin (absolute values) (units: micro-international units per milliliter (µIU/mL))
Investigators will assess the insulin levels attained at the basal IIR, and at each stepwise reduction in IIR during the intervention phase.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure.
Serum insulin (relative/change) (units: fold difference and/or ∆ µIU/mL relative to previous time points)
Investigators will compare the baseline insulin level to that attained at the basal IIR, as well as comparing to the change in insulin level that occurs with alterations in the IIR during the intervention phase.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure.
Serum C-peptide (absolute values) (units: ng/mL)
Suppression of endogenous insulin by octreotide during pancreatic clamp is expected to result in a fall in C-peptide levels to near zero.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Serum C-peptide (relative/change) (units: fold difference and/or ∆ µIU/mL relative to previous time points)
Suppression of endogenous insulin by octreotide during pancreatic clamp is expected to result in a fall in C-peptide levels to near zero.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Serum or plasma triglyceride (TG) (absolute values) (units: mg/dL)
TG levels in serum reflect hepatic synthesis/storage and very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) secretion.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Serum or plasma triglyceride (TG) (relative/change) (units: fold difference and/or ∆mg/dL relative to previous time points)
TG levels in serum reflect hepatic synthesis/storage and VLDL secretion.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Serum or plasma free fatty acid (FFA) (absolute values) (units: mg/dL)
FFA levels reflect adipose tissue lipolysis and its response to insulin and counterregulatory hormones.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Serum or plasma free fatty acid (FFA) (relative/change) (units: fold difference and/or ∆mg/dL relative to previous time points)
FFA levels reflect adipose tissue lipolysis and its response to insulin and counterregulatory hormones.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Serum or plasma apolipoprotein B (ApoB) (absolute values) (units: mg/dL)
ApoB level is a surrogate for triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, especially hepatic VLDL.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Serum or plasma apolipoprotein B (ApoB) (relative/change) (units: fold difference and/or ∆mg/dL relative to previous time points)
ApoB level is a surrogate for triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, especially hepatic VLDL.
Time frame: Up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Plasma glucose kinetics: rate of appearance (units: mg/kg/min)
Calculated from D2G tracer enrichment by the Steele equations.
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Time frame: Measured every 5 minutes x 4 at the end of each steady-state IIR period, up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Plasma glucose kinetics: rate of disappearance (units: mg/kg/min)
Calculated from D2G tracer enrichment by the Steele equations
Time frame: Measured every 5 minutes x 4 at the end of each steady-state IIR period, up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure
Plasma glucose kinetics: endogenous glucose production (units: mg/kg/min)
Calculated from D2G tracer enrichment by the Steele equations
Time frame: Measured every 5 minutes x 4 at the end of each steady-state IIR period, up to 425 minutes from the start of the procedure