Prehospital exenatide in hyperglycemic stroke-A randomized trial.
Acta Neurol Scand · 2019
Last updated 2026-05-28In a small, early-stage study, researchers tested whether giving the GLP-1 drug exenatide to stroke patients with high blood sugar before they reached the hospital would lower their blood sugar. Among 19 patients, those who received exenatide had similar blood sugar levels after 4 hours as those who received standard care (7.6 vs. 7.0 mmol/L). No serious side effects were reported, but the study was stopped early due to low enrollment.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Acta Neurol Scand, 2019 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 5 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.20 |
| NIH percentile | 13 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Hyperglycemia is a predictor for poor stroke outcome. Hyperglycemic stroke patients treated with thrombolysis have an increased risk of intracranial hemorrhage. Insulin is the gold standard for treating hyperglycemia but comes with a risk of hypoglycemia. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA) are drugs used in type 2 diabetes that have a low risk of hypoglycemia and have been shown to exert neuroprotective effects. The primary objective was to determine whether prehospital administration of the GLP-1RA exenatide could lower plasma glucose in stroke patients. Secondary objective was to study tolerability and safety.
MATERIALS & METHODS: Randomized controlled trial comparing exenatide administrated prehospitally with a control group receiving standard care for hyperglycemia. Patients with Face Arm Speech Test ≥1 and glucose ≥8 mmol/L were randomized. Glucose was monitored for 24 hours. All adverse events were recorded.
RESULTS: Nineteen patients were randomized, eight received exenatide. An interim recruitment failure analysis with subsequent changes of the protocol was made. The study was stopped prematurely due to slow inclusion. No difference was observed in the main outcome of plasma glucose at 4 hours, control vs exenatide (mean, SD); 7.0 ± 1.9 vs 7.6 ± 1.6; P = .56). No major adverse events were reported.
CONCLUSIONS: We found no evidence that prehospital exenatide had effect on hyperglycemia. However, it was given without adverse events in this study with limited sample size that was prematurely stopped due to slow inclusion.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31518433 ↗
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