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Effect of Liraglutide Treatment on Jejunostomy Output in Patients With Short Bowel Syndrome: An Open-Label Pilot Study.

JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr · 2018

Last updated 2026-05-28

In an 8-week study of 8 patients with short bowel syndrome, daily injections of liraglutide reduced the daily fluid lost through an ostomy by an average of 474 grams, from 3,249 grams to 2,775 grams. The treatment also increased intestinal fluid absorption by 464 grams per day and energy absorption by 902 kilojoules per day, while raising urine production by 765 grams per day.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr, 2018
Citations49
Relative citation ratio2.82
NIH percentile83
Molecules liraglutide

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An impaired hormonal "ileo-colonic brake" may contribute to rapid gastric emptying, gastric hypersecretion, high ostomy losses, and the need for parenteral support in end-jejunostomy short bowel syndrome (SBS) patients with intestinal failure (IF). Liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist, may reduce gastric hypersecretion and dampen gastric emptying, thereby improving conditions for intestinal absorption. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In an 8-week, open-label pilot study, liraglutide was given subcutaneously once daily to 8 end-jejunostomy patients, aged 63.4 ± 10.9 years (mean ± SD) and with small bowel lengths of 110 ± 66 cm. The 72-hour metabolic balance studies were performed before and at the end of treatment. Food intake was unrestricted. Oral fluid intake and parenteral support volume were kept constant. The primary end point was change in the ostomy wet weight output. RESULTS: Liraglutide reduced ostomy wet weight output by 474 ± 563 g/d from 3249 ± 1352 to 2775 ± 1187 g/d (P = .049, Student t test). Intestinal wet weight absorption tended to increase by 464 ± 557 g/d (P = .05), as did urine production by 765 ± 759 g/d (P = .02). Intestinal energy absorption improved by 902 ± 882 kJ/d (P = .02). CONCLUSION: Liraglutide reduced ostomy wet weight output in end-jejunostomy patients with SBS-IF and increased their intestinal wet weight and energy absorption. If larger, randomized, placebo-controlled studies confirm these effects, it adds to the hypothesis that many ileo-colonic brake hormones in conjunction may be involved in the process of intestinal adaptation. By identification of key hormones and addressing their potential synergistic effects, better treatments may be provided to patients with SBS-IF. This trial was registered at clinicaltrialsregister.eu as 2013-005499-16.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27875281 ↗

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