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LEADER 3--lipase and amylase activity in subjects with type 2 diabetes: baseline data from over 9000 subjects in the LEADER Trial.

Pancreas · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 9,340 people with type 2 diabetes, about 22.7% had higher-than-normal levels of lipase or amylase enzymes before starting treatment with liraglutide or a placebo. Specifically, 16.6% had elevated lipase (1.2% very high) and 11.8% had elevated amylase (0.2% very high), even without symptoms of pancreatitis. Poor kidney function was linked to higher enzyme levels, but even those with normal kidney function had elevated enzymes in 12.2% (lipase) and 7.7% (amylase) of cases.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPancreas, 2014
Citations65
Relative citation ratio2.33
NIH percentile78
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This report from the LEADER (Liraglutide Effect and Action in Diabetes: Evaluation of Cardiovascular Outcome Results) trial describes baseline lipase and amylase activity in type 2 diabetic subjects without acute pancreatitis symptoms before randomization to the glucagonlike peptide analog liraglutide or placebo. METHODS: The LEADER is an international randomized placebo-controlled trial evaluating the cardiovascular safety of liraglutide in 9340 type 2 diabetic patients at high cardiovascular risk. Fasting lipase and amylase activity was assessed at baseline, before receiving liraglutide or placebo, using a commercial assay (Roche) with upper limit of normal values of 63 U/L for lipase and 100 U/L for amylase. RESULTS: Either or both enzymes were above the upper limit of normal in 22.7% of subjects; 16.6% (n = 1540) had an elevated lipase level (including 1.2% >3-fold elevated), and 11.8% (n = 1094) had an elevated amylase level (including 0.2% >3-fold elevated). In multivariable regression models, severely reduced kidney function was associated with the largest effect on increasing activity of both. However, even among subjects with normal kidney function, 12.2% and 7.7% had elevated lipase and amylase levels. CONCLUSIONS: In this large study of type 2 diabetic patients, nearly 25% had elevated lipase or amylase levels without symptoms of acute pancreatitis. The clinician must take these data into account when evaluating abdominal symptoms in type 2 diabetic patients.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25275271 ↗