“The key question is not whether insulin signaling is impaired — it is whether hyperglycemia reflects impaired signaling or substrate excess. That distinction changes everything about how we treat.”
— John M. Poothullil, MD, FRCP
Medical Hypotheses, Elsevier · Vol. 209, 2026 · Article 111926
We welcome clinicians, endocrinologists, and researchers to engage with this peer-reviewed hypothesis. The observations described here are not disputed — the point of disagreement concerns whether the phenotype we call “insulin resistance” is a primary causal defect, or a predictable consequence of substrate competition under conditions of nutrient excess. We invite you to consider the evidence and decide how to integrate this perspective into practice.
A substrate-competition hypothesis for type 2 diabetes driven by nutrient excess rather than a primary insulin-signaling defect