Does liraglutide alleviate inflammation in brain-dead donors? A randomized clinical trial.
Liver Transpl · 2024
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 50 brain-dead donors, those given liraglutide had lower levels of the inflammatory marker IL-6 (-28 pg/mL vs. +32 pg/mL in the placebo group) and smaller increases in the anti-inflammatory marker IL-10 (-0.01 pg/mL vs. +1.9 pg/mL) during follow-up. However, liraglutide did not change the activity of genes or proteins linked to inflammation, cell stress, or oxidative damage in liver tissue. The drug also did not improve the rate of organ recovery.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Liver Transpl, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 5 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.88 |
| NIH percentile | 46 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
Abstract
Brain death triggers an inflammatory cascade that damages organs before procurement, adversely affecting the quality of grafts. This randomized clinical trial aimed to compare the efficacy of liraglutide compared to placebo in attenuating brain death-induced inflammation, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and oxidative stress. We conducted a double-blinded, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial with brain-dead donors. Fifty brain-dead donors were randomized to receive subcutaneous liraglutide or placebo. The primary outcome was the reduction in IL-6 plasma levels. Secondary outcomes were changes in other plasma pro-inflammatory (IL-1β, interferon-γ, TNF) and anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10), expression of antiapoptotic ( BCL2 ), endoplasmic reticulum stress markers ( DDIT3/CHOP , HSPA5/BIP ), and antioxidant ( superoxide dismutase 2 , uncoupling protein 2 ) genes, and expression TNF, DDIT3, and superoxide dismutase 2 proteins in liver biopsies. The liraglutide group showed lower cytokine levels compared to the placebo group during follow-up: Δ IL-6 (-28 [-182, 135] vs. 32 [-10.6, 70.7] pg/mL; p = 0.041) and Δ IL-10 (-0.01 [-2.2, 1.5] vs. 1.9 [-0.2, 6.1] pg/mL; p = 0.042), respectively. The administration of liraglutide did not significantly alter the expression of inflammatory, antiapoptotic, endoplasmic reticulum stress, or antioxidant genes in the liver tissue. Similar to gene expression, expressions of proteins in the liver were not affected by the administration of liraglutide. Treatment with liraglutide did not increase the organ recovery rate [OR = 1.2 (95% CI: 0.2-8.6), p = 0.82]. Liraglutide administration reduced IL-6 and prevented the increase of IL-10 plasma levels in brain-dead donors without affecting the expression of genes and proteins related to inflammation, apoptosis, endoplasmic reticulum stress, or oxidative stress.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37938130 ↗
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