Liraglutide improves memory in obese patients with prediabetes or early type 2 diabetes: a randomized, controlled study.
Int J Obes (Lond) · 2020
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 40 obese adults with prediabetes or early type 2 diabetes, those who took liraglutide (1.8 mg/day) showed improved short-term memory and overall memory scores after losing about 7% of their body weight, compared to a group that received lifestyle counseling. Both groups achieved similar weight loss and blood sugar control, but only the liraglutide group saw significant memory improvements.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Int J Obes (Lond), 2020 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 82 |
| Relative citation ratio | 4.67 |
| NIH percentile | 91 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Diabetic subjects are at increased risk of subtle cognitive impairment since the disease early stages and of dementia later in life. In animal models, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonizts (GLP1-RAs) have been shown to exert neuroprotective effects, expecially in the memory domain. We assessed whether treatment with a GLP1-RA might affect cognitive functions in type 2 diabetic subjects independently on the weight loss it might induce.
SUBJECTS/METHODS: Forty metformin-treated obese subjects with prediabetes or newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus, received liraglutide (1.8 mg/d) (n = 20) or lifestyle counseling (dietary intervention and exercise training) (n = 20) until achieving a modest and comparable weight loss (-7% of initial body weight).
INTERVENTIONS/METHODS: A detailed neuropsychological assessment before and after weight loss was completed in 16 patients per arm, who were administered a total of seven psychological tests, thus assessing three composite domain z-scores for attention, memory, and executive control.
RESULTS: After comparable weight loss and superimposable glycemic control and insulin sensitivity, a significant increase in short term memory (mean Digit Span Z score from -0.06 to 0.80, p = 0.024) and memory composite z-score (mean memory z-score from -0.67 to 0.032, p = 0.0065) was observed in the liraglutide exposed subjects (between group p = 0.041 and p = 0.033, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: Liraglutide might slow down memory function decline in diabetic patients in early, and possibly preclinical stages of the disease.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31965072 ↗
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