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Histological changes in endocrine and exocrine pancreatic tissue from patients exposed to incretin-based therapies.

Diabetes Obes Metab · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study examined pancreatic tissue from 7 type 2 diabetes patients on incretin-based drugs, 6 without the drugs, 11 without diabetes, and 9 brain-dead organ donors. It found no significant differences in beta-cell or alpha-cell area, replication rates, or acinar and duct cell replication between groups. Insulin-positive duct cells were more common in incretin-treated patients and organ donors, while rare, low-grade pancreatic lesions were slightly more frequent in the incretin group.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Obes Metab, 2016
Citations15
Relative citation ratio0.56
NIH percentile32
Molecules

Abstract

AIMS: Incretin-based therapies have been associated with an increased risk of pancreatitis. Recently, various histological abnormalities have been reported in human pancreatic tissue from brain-dead organ donors who had been exposed to incretin-based drugs. In the present study we examined pancreatic tissue collected at surgery. METHODS: Human pancreatic tissue from 7 type 2-diabetic patients treated with incretin-based drugs (type 2-I), 6 diabetic patients without incretin treatment (type 2-NI), 11 patients without diabetes (no diabetes group) and 9 brain-dead organ donors (BDOD group) was examined. RESULTS: Fractional beta-cell area was reduced in the type 2-NI group compared to the group without diabetes (P < .05), but there was no difference compared to the type 2-I patients. Alpha-cell area (P = .30), beta-cell replication (P = .17) and alpha-cell replication (P = .91) were not different. There were also no differences in acinar cell (P = .13) and duct cell replication (P = .099). Insulin-positive duct cells were more frequent in the type 2-I and the BDOD groups (P = .034). No co-expression of insulin and glucagon was detected. Pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) lesions were very rare, all low-grade (PanIN 1a and 1b) and tended to occur more frequently in the type 2-I group (P = .084). CONCLUSIONS: The present results did not reveal marked histological abnormalities in the pancreas of incretin-treated patients with type 2 diabetes. Low numbers of specimens available and a large inter-individual variability of the findings warrant caution regarding the interpretation of histological data concerning drug effects on the human pancreas.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27545110 ↗