Effect of incretin therapies compared to pioglitazone and gliclazide in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in diabetic patients not controlled on metformin alone: An observational, pilot study.
Endocrinol Nutr · 2016
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 6-month study of 58 diabetic patients, those taking exenatide were most likely to show improvement in liver fat (80%), followed by sitagliptin (45.5%), pioglitazone (37.5%), gliclazide (33.3%), and liraglutide (33%). Changes in weight and waist size were linked to better liver scan results, but the differences between drug groups were not statistically significant.
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| Journal | Endocrinol Nutr, 2016 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 18 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.75 |
| NIH percentile | 41 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Mash |
Abstract
AIM: To compare the effect of different hypoglycemic drugs on laboratory and ultrasonographic markers of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in patients with type 2 diabetes not controlled on metformin alone.
METHODS: Prospective study of diabetic patients treated with metformin in combination with gliclazide, pioglitazone, sitagliptin, exenatide, or liraglutide. NAFLD was assessed by abdominal ultrasound and NAFLD fibrosis score was calculated at baseline and 6 months.
RESULTS: Fifty-eight patients completed 6 months of follow-up: 15 received gliclazide, 13 pioglitazone, 15 sitagliptin, 7 exenatide, and 8 liraglutide. NAFLD affected 57.8% of patients at baseline, and its ultrasonographic course varied depending on changes in weight (P=.009) and waist circumference (P=.012). The proportions of patients who experienced ultrasonographic improvement in the different treatment groups were: 33.3% with gliclazide, 37.5% with pioglitazone, 45.5% with sitagliptin, 80% with exenatide, and 33% with liraglutide (P=.28).
CONCLUSIONS: Qualitative ultrasonographic NAFLD improvement in diabetic patients treated with metformin in combination with other hypoglycemic drugs is associated to change over time in weight and waist circumference. Long-term clinical trials are needed to assess whether incretin therapies result in better liver outcomes than other hypoglycemic therapies.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26976710 ↗