[Is there life after teduglutide?]
Nutr Hosp · 2020
Last updated 2026-05-28Teduglutide, a GLP-2 drug, is used to treat short bowel syndrome (SBS) by reducing the need for intravenous nutrition and fluids. In one patient with SBS, teduglutide led to a greater reduction in fluid imbalance, allowing them to stop nighttime intravenous therapy, gain weight, and maintain nutrition for two years after stopping the drug. The patient had previously taken liraglutide, which also reduced fluid loss but to a lesser extent.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Nutr Hosp, 2020 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 0 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.00 |
| NIH percentile | 0 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
Intestinal failure (IF) is defined as a reduction in intestinal function below the minimum necessary for the absorption of nutrients, requiring intravenous supplementation to maintain health and/or growth. The most common cause is short bowel syndrome (SBS). Approximately 50% of patients with SBS have IF and require parenteral support. Teduglutide is a human glucagon-like peptide-2 analogue (GLP-2) approved for the treatment of patients with SBS. Clinical trial results have proven its efficacy by reducing volume and days of administration of parenteral nutrition and fluid therapy. Few publications evaluate the effects on long-term bowel function in respondent patients after teduglutide suspension. A patient with type I SBS (terminal jejunostomy) due to multiple surgeries for Crohn's disease, who was treated with liraglutide for one year and sequential teduglutide for 21 months, is described. With the former, a reduction in the need for contribution and debit by jejunostomy was observed. The GLP-2 analogue achieved a greater reduction in the hydric disbalance that allowed the suspension of the nocturnal suerotherapy, with weight gain and maintenance of nutritional parameters; situation maintained two years after its suspension.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32406744 ↗