Diabetes Care, Vol 20, Issue 1 84-89, Copyright © 1997 by American Diabetes Association
Increased urinary albumin and retinol-binding protein in type I diabetes. A study of identical twins
SW Dubrey, R Beetham, J Miles, MI Noble, R Rowe and RD Leslie
Academic Unit of Cardiovascular Medicine, Charing Cross Hospital, London, U.K.
OBJECTIVE: Indexes of early renal glomerular and tubular dysfunction have
been demonstrated in type I diabetes, but it remains uncertain whether such
changes are genetically determined or are secondary to the disease process.
We therefore undertook to study whether early markers of renal dysfunction
are a consequence of type I diabetes or inherited. RESEARCH DESIGN AND
METHODS: We estimated both urinary albumin excretion (UAE) and urinary
retinol-binding protein (RBP) in 51 identical twin pairs discordant for
type I diabetes and in 51 matched control subjects. RESULTS: UAE and RBP
were significantly higher in the diabetic twins than in their nondiabetic
co-twins (P < 0.0001 and P < 0.0002, respectively). Seven diabetic
twins had elevated UAE, but none of the nondiabetic co-twins did. In a
subgroup of 44 twins with normal UAE (albumin excretion rate < 20
micrograms/min), diabetic twins had both a higher albumin excretion
function (median [range]; 0.64 [0.18-2.74] mg/mmol creatinine) than their
nondiabetic co-twins (0.48 [0.24-1.40], P < 0.01) and higher levels of
RBP excretion (10.4 [4.0-167.0] micrograms/mmol creatinine) than their
nondiabetic co-twins (7.5 [0.97-23.0], P < 0.05). Values between twins
of a pair were significantly correlated for RBP (r = 0.36, P < 0.05) but
not for UAE (r = 0.13). CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that in type I
diabetes, an index of renal tubular function (RBP), but not glomerular
function (UAE), is influenced by shared genetic and nongenetic factors.
Type I diabetes can affect renal tubular function even when glomerular
function is normal. We conclude that neither the increased UAE nor urinary
RBP found in type I diabetes is inherited independently of the diabetes
process.