A 14-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric outpatient clinic following a routine blood test. She is asymptomatic, but due to a significant family history of diabetes, a fasting glucose was checked and returned at 7.2 mmol/L.
Her C-peptide level is also requested.
What is the primary rationale for this specific investigation in this patient?
CORRECT ANSWER:
The primary purpose of measuring C-peptide is to differentiate between type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and Maturity-Onset Diabetes of the Young (MODY).
C-peptide is co-secreted with insulin from pancreatic beta-cells in equimolar amounts, making it a reliable marker of endogenous insulin production. In T1DM, autoimmune destruction of beta-cells leads to absolute insulin deficiency, resulting in very low or undetectable C-peptide levels. Conversely, in T2DM and most forms of MODY, the underlying pathophysiology involves insulin resistance or a genetic defect in insulin secretion, but the beta-cells are still functional.
Therefore, C-peptide levels will be normal or even elevated, reflecting the body's ongoing, albeit ineffective, insulin production. Given the strong family history and the patient's age, distinguishing between these aetiologies is crucial for determining the correct management pathway, as per national paediatric diabetes guidelines.
WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS:
Option A (To diagnose DKA) is incorrect because the diagnosis of diabetic ketoacidosis is based on clinical signs and the biochemical triad of hyperglycaemia, ketonaemia, and acidosis, not C-peptide levels.
Option B (To measure the degree of insulin resistance) is incorrect because while C-peptide reflects insulin production, the gold standard for quantifying insulin resistance is the hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic clamp, not a single C-peptide measurement.
Option D (To check for fatty acid oxidation defects) is incorrect as these are metabolic disorders diagnosed through specific acylcarnitine profiles and genetic testing, and are unrelated to C-peptide.
Option E (To confirm the presence of ketosis) is incorrect because ketosis is confirmed by measuring ketones in the blood or urine, not by assessing pancreatic beta-cell function with a C-peptide test.