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Effects of Treatment with Liraglutide Early after Surgical Intervention on Clinical Outcomes in Patients with Short Bowel Syndrome: A Pilot Observational "Real-Life" Study.

Nutrients · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a small study of 19 adults with a new diagnosis of short bowel syndrome (SBS) within a month after surgery, those who took the GLP-1 drug liraglutide for 6 months saw their daily ostomy or fecal output drop by an average of 550 mL, compared to a 200 mL reduction in 20 untreated patients. By 6 months, 63.2% of treated patients had at least a 20% reduction in output, versus 30.0% in the untreated group. The most common side effect was mild nausea, though one patient experienced severe nausea and vomiting.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNutrients, 2023
Citations8
Relative citation ratio1.86
NIH percentile71
Molecules liraglutide

Abstract

Liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 agonist, has been shown to have beneficial effects on fecal output in short bowel syndrome (SBS) by small human studies. Its potential effects early after gut resection are not known. In this pilot observational study, we described the 1- and 6-month liraglutide effects in 19 adult patients with a new SBS diagnosis within 1 month after surgical resection. Stomal/fecal and urinary outcomes, serum/urinary electrolytes, and body composition were assessed. Both within-group differences and between-group comparisons with 20 SBS patients refusing liraglutide treatment were evaluated. The main liraglutide-related side effect was mild nausea, except in one patient, who experienced severe nausea/vomiting. The median ostomy/fecal output was significantly reduced by -550 mL/day after 6 months of treatment (. -200 mL/day in untreated, = 0.04). The number of patients reaching a ≥20% output reduction was 10/19 (52.6%) treated . 3/20 (15.0%) untreated patients ( = 0.013) at 1 month and 12/19 (63.2%) . 6/20 (30.0%) ( = 0.038) at 6 months, respectively. Participants with a clinically relevant output reduction at 6 months had a significantly lower baseline weight and BMI. Energy parenteral supply significantly decreased, while infused volumes, oral energy, and fluid intakes slightly decreased, though not significantly. This pilot study supports liraglutide benefits in ostomy/fecal output early after surgical gut resection in SBS patients, particularly in those with lower baseline weight values.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37375644 ↗

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