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Insulin Resistance during normal child growth and development is associated with a distinct blood metabolic phenotype (Earlybird 72)
Author(s) -
Hosking Joanne,
Pinkney Jonathan,
Jeffery Alison,
Cominetti Ornella,
Da Silva Laeticia,
Collino Sebastiano,
Kussmann Martin,
Hager Jorg,
Martin FrancoisPierre
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
pediatric diabetes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.678
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1399-5448
pISSN - 1399-543X
DOI - 10.1111/pedi.12884
Subject(s) - medicine , phenotype , insulin resistance , insulin , endocrinology , genetics , biology , gene
Background While insulin resistance (IR) is associated with specific metabolite signatures in adults, there have been few truly longitudinal studies in healthy children, either to confirm which abnormalities are present, or to determine whether they precede or result from IR. Therefore, we investigated the association of serum metabolites with IR in childhood in the Earlybird cohort. Methods The Earlybird cohort is a well‐characterized cohort of healthy children with annual measurements from age 5 to 16 years. For the first time, longitudinal association analyses between individual serum metabolites and homeostatic model assessment (HOMA) of insulin resistance (HOMA‐IR) have been performed taking into account the effects of age, growth, puberty, adiposity, and physical activity. Results IR was higher in girls than in boys and was associated with increasing body mass index (BMI). In longitudinal analysis IR was associated with reduced concentrations of branched‐chain amino acids (BCAA), 2‐ketobutyrate, citrate and 3‐hydroxybutyrate, and higher concentrations of lactate and alanine. These findings demonstrate the widespread biochemical consequences of IR for intermediary metabolism, ketogenesis, and pyruvate oxidation during normal child growth and development. Conclusions Longitudinal analysis can differentiate metabolite signatures that precede or follow the development of greater levels of IR. In healthy normal weight children, higher levels of IR are associated with reduced levels of BCAA, ketogenesis, and fuel oxidation. In contrast, elevated lactate concentrations preceded the rise in IR. These changes reveal the metabolite signature of insulin action during normal growth, and they contrast with previous findings in obese children and adults that represent the consequences of IR and obesity.