A feasibility study of the combination of intranasal insulin with dulaglutide for cognition in older adults with metabolic syndrome at high dementia risk - Study rationale and design.
Mech Ageing Dev · 2023
Last updated 2026-05-28This study is testing whether combining a GLP-1 drug (dulaglutide, 1.5 mg weekly) with intranasal insulin (20 IU twice daily) improves brain function in 80 adults over 60 who have metabolic syndrome and mild memory problems. Participants will be split into four groups, with some receiving both treatments, some only one, and some placebos, over 12 months. The study will check if the combination is safe, easy to use, and whether it affects brain blood flow, sugar use, or markers linked to Alzheimer’s disease.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Mech Ageing Dev, 2023 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 4 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.76 |
| NIH percentile | 41 |
| Molecules | dulaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Alzheimers, Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: We present the rationale and design of a double-blind placebo-controlled feasibility trial combining intranasal insulin (INI) with dulaglutide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist, to improve cognition in older adults with metabolic syndrome (MetS) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Since both INI and dulaglutide have beneficial effects on the cerebrovascular disease (CVD), we anticipate that improved CVD will underlie the hypothesized cognitive benefits.
METHODS: This 12-months trial will include 80 older adults aged > 60 with MetS and MCI, randomized to 4 groups: INI/dulaglutide injection, intranasal placebo/dulaglutide injection, INI/placebo injection, and intranasal placebo/placebo injection. Feasibility of combining INI with dulaglutide will be tested by examining the ease of use of INI (20IU, twice/day) with dulaglutide (1.5 mg/week), adherence, and safety profile are the efficacy of combination therapy on global cognition and neurobiological markers: cerebral blood flow, cerebral glucose utilization, white matter hyperintensities, Alzheimer's related blood biomarkers and expression of insulin signaling proteins measured in brain-derived exosomes. Efficacy will be assessed for the intent-to-treat sample.
DISCUSSION: This feasibility study is anticipated to provide the basis for a multi-center large-scale randomized clinical trial of the cognitive benefits of the combination of INI with dulaglutide in individuals enriched for CVD and at high dementia risk.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37245533 ↗
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