Effect of exenatide on postprandial glucose fluxes, lipolysis, and ß-cell function in non-diabetic, morbidly obese patients.
Diabetes Obes Metab · 2017
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 3-month study of 30 morbidly obese, non-diabetic adults, those given exenatide (10 µg twice daily) lost weight compared to controls. Exenatide reduced post-meal blood sugar spikes, delayed glucose absorption, and lowered post-meal glucagon levels, while improving insulin sensitivity in the liver, fat tissue, and overall body.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Obes Metab, 2017 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 18 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.73 |
| NIH percentile | 40 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Obesity |
Abstract
AIMS: To investigate the effect of exenatide on glucose disposal, insulin secretion, ß-cell function, lipolysis and hormone concentrations in non-diabetic, morbidly obese subjects under physiological conditions.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients were assigned to exenatide 10 µg twice daily (EXE, n = 15) or control (CT, n = 15) for 3 months. Patients received a meal test/tracer study (MTT) to measure endogenous glucose production (EGP), rate of oral glucose appearance (RaO), insulin secretion rate (ISR), ß-cell function, hepatic insulin resistance (HIR) and adipose tissue insulin resistance (AT-IR) and insulin sensitivity (IS).
RESULTS: Post treatment, the EXE group showed a significant reduction in body weight ( P < .001). The postmeal time-course of glucose, insulin and ISR showed a lower peak between 60 and 180 minutes in phase with a reduction in RaO ( P < .01). After an initial similar suppression, EGP resumed at higher rates between 60 and 180 minutes ( P = .02) in EXE vs CT, while total RaO and EGP were similar throughout the MTT. In EXE, the postmeal glucagon, GLP1 and GIP responses were reduced ( P < .05). Fasting and postprandial lipolysis and ß-cell function were unaltered by active treatment. HIR, AT-IR and IS were all improved after exenatide treatment ( P < .05).
CONCLUSIONS: In morbidly obese non-diabetic subjects, exenatide causes weight loss, decreased postprandial glycaemia and glucagon response without changes in ß-cell function. These effects are consequent upon delayed oral glucose appearance in the circulation. Exenatide treatment is also associated with an improvement in hepatic, adipose tissue and whole-body IS with no influence on postprandial lipolysis.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27898183 ↗
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