The purpose of this study is to examine the effect of exenatide, an anti-diabetes medication, on liver fat and blood levels of proteins that influence liver fat.
Obesity is characterized as generalized expansion of all adipose tissue depots, an increase in tissue lipid content, and dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes. The adipocyte functions not only as a storage depot for fat but as an endocrine organ that releases hormones in response to specific extracellular stimuli or changes in metabolic status. These secreted proteins, carry out a variety of diverse functions, and they have been referred to collectively as adipokines. The adipokines have been postulated to play important roles in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance, hypertension, disorders of coagulation, dyslipidemia, and glucose intolerance, abnormalities associated with insulin resistance syndrome. These observations are of considerable interest because recent studies have provided evidence that increased hepatic fat content is an important determinant of hepatic insulin resistance in type 2 diabetic patients. Fatty liver is common in type 2 diabetic patients. The mechanisms responsible for the increase in hepatic fat content are unclear. It has been suggested that fatty liver results from accelerated fatty acid mobilization from expanded visceral fat stores and their deposition in the liver as well as decreased hepatic fatty acid oxidation. Weight loss in humans with Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) is associated with a decrease in hepatic fat content. In addition, thiazolidinediones have been shown to reduce hepatic fat content and improve hepatic insulin sensitivity in patients with type 2 diabetes as well as in non-diabetic patients with NAFLD. The thiazolidinediones initiate their action by binding the peroxisome proliferator activator receptors (PPAR) , which primarily are located on adipocytes. Treatment of insulin-resistant mice as well as type 2 diabetic patients with insulin sensitizing PPAR activators, such as thiazolidinediones, and increases plasma adiponectin levels. Indirect evidence suggests that adiponectin might mediate some of the insulin-sensitizing effects of PPAR agonists. Exenatide, a Glucagon Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist approved for treatment of type 2 diabetes, elicited dose-dependent reductions in body weight in association with improved glycemic control in type 2 diabetic patients. In animal models of obesity, exenatide reduces hepatic fat. However, the effect of exenatide treatment in combination with a thiazolidinedione on liver fat content and plasma adipocytokines levels in patients with type 2 diabetes remains to be investigated.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
24
Type 2 diabetic subjects will be randomized to receive exenatide 10 micrograms injected subcutaneously twice daily for 12 months. Prior to randomization, all subjects will receive baseline measurements of fasting plasma glucose, plasma adipocytokines, Free Fatty Acids, insulin, plasma lipids, and HbA1c as well as measurement of liver fat content with magnetic resonance spectroscopy. All subjects will undergo repeat measurements of fasting plasma glucose, Free Fatty Acids, insulin and adipocytokines as well as hepatic fat content determination at the end of the 12 month treatment period.
Type 2 diabetic subjects will be randomized to receive pioglitazone 45 mg daily orally for 12 months. Prior to randomization, all subjects will receive baseline measurements of fasting plasma glucose, plasma adipocytokines, Free Fatty Acids, insulin, plasma lipids, and HbA1c as well as measurement of liver fat content with magnetic resonance spectroscopy. All subjects will undergo repeat measurements of fasting plasma glucose, Free Fatty Acids, insulin and adipocytokines as well as hepatic fat content determination at the end of the 12 month treatment period.
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, Texas, United States
Hepatic Fat
The effect of exenatide and pioglitazone on liver fat content after one year of treatment in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Time frame: one year
Plasma Adipocytokines
the effect of the intervention on plasma adiponectin levels.
Time frame: one year
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