Effect of nicotinamide treatment on the residual insulin secretion in Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients
- 1 May 1989
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Springer Nature in Diabetologia
- Vol. 32 (5) , 316-321
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00265549
Abstract
In vivo and in vitro experiments have shown that nicotinamide enhances the regeneration of rat B cells. Nicotinamide has been administered to human subjects at a dose of 3 g/day for more than one year without any serious side effects. A trial was conducted to study if nicotinamide could protect B cells in Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients with established diabetes, but still with residual insulin secretion, the latter being evaluated throughout the study period. A randomized double-blind study was carried out on 26 Type I diabetic patients aged 15 to 40 years who had been treated with insulin for 1 to 5 years but who had a residual insulin secretion characterized by a glucagon stimulated C-peptide level higher than 0.1 nmol/l. They were given either 3 g/day of nicotinamide or a placebo for nine months. At baseline the treated and control groups did not differ according to age, diabetes duration, insulin dose, HbA1c or C-peptide levels. Three patients dropped out of the study. At 9 months there were no significant changes in the insulin doses required. However, HbA1c rose in the control group (8.1±0.4 vs 9.8±0.5%, ppp<0.05) but not in the treated patients (fasting C-peptide: 0.22±0.04 vs 0.24±0.05 nmol/l; post glucagon C-peptide: 0.30±0.04 vs 0.33±0.07). At six and nine months, fasting and stimulated C-peptide were higher in the treated than in the non-treated group. The C-peptide response to a meal test gradually declined in the placebo group, whereas it was stable in the nicotinamide treated group. No serious side effects were noted; in particular, hepatic function and plasma lipid content remained unchanged. These results suggest that nicotinamide treatment may protect residual B-cell function in Type 1 diabetes; but further studies are needed to assess the clinical implications of such treatment.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Factors influencing the magnitude, duration, and rate of fall of B-cell function in Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic children followed for two years from their clinical diagnosisDiabetologia, 1988
- Factors affecting and patterns of residual insulin secretion during the first year of Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus in childrenDiabetologia, 1987
- Residual insulin production, glycaemic control and prevalence of microvascular lesions and polyneuropathy in long-term Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitusDiabetologia, 1987
- NICOTINAMIDE MAY EXTEND REMISSION PHASE ININSULIN-DEPENDENT DIABETESThe Lancet, 1987
- Nicotinamide treatment in diabetesBritish Journal of Dermatology, 1987
- Prednisone Treatment in Newly Diagnosed Type I Diabetic Children: 1-Yr Follow-UpDiabetes Care, 1987
- Type I Diabetes MellitusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Sustained insulin-induced remissions of juvenile diabetes by means of an external artificial pancreasDiabetologia, 1978
- Clofibrate and Niacin in Coronary Heart DiseaseJAMA, 1975
- Radioimmunoassay of Human Proinsulin C-peptide Using Synthetic Human Connecting PeptideEndocrinologia Japonica, 1974