Adolescents with obesity treated with exenatide maintain endogenous GLP-1, reduce DPP-4, and improve glycemic control.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) · 2023
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 44 adolescents with obesity, those given weekly 2 mg injections of exenatide for 26 weeks maintained their natural GLP-1 levels while showing a significant reduction in DPP-4 (a protein that breaks down GLP-1) and proinsulin. The treatment also increased glicentin levels but did not change insulin, C-peptide, or glucagon levels during a glucose tolerance test. Exenatide did not affect the adolescents' natural GLP-1 secretion.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Front Endocrinol (Lausanne), 2023 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 7 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.87 |
| NIH percentile | 45 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA) are increasingly used to treat adolescent obesity. However, the effect on endogenous GLP-1 secretory patterns following treatment in adolescents is unknown. The GLP-1RA exenatide was shown to significantly lower BMI and 2-hour glucose in adolescents with obesity, in the placebo-controlled, randomized controlled trial Combat-JUDO. The aim of this study was to evaluate effects of weekly injections of 2 mg exenatide extended release on secretory patterns of endogenous hormones during OGTT.
SUBJECTS AND MEASUREMENTS: This study was a pre-planned sub-study of the Combat-JUDO trial, set at the Pediatric clinic at Uppsala University Hospital, Sweden and Paracelsus Medical University, Austria. 44 adolescents with obesity were included and randomized 1:1 to treatment:placebo. 19 patients in the treatment group and 18 in the placebo group completed the trial. Before and after treatment, GLP-1, glucose, insulin, glucagon and glicentin levels were measured during OGTT; DPP-4 and proinsulin were measured at fasting. A per-protocol approach was used in the analyses.
RESULTS: Exenatide treatment did not affect GLP-1 levels during OGTT. Treatment significantly lowered DPP-4, proinsulin and the proinsulin-to-insulin ratio at fasting, increased glicentin levels but did not affect insulin, C-peptide or glucagon levels during OGTT.
CONCLUSION: Weekly s.c. injections with 2 mg of exenatide maintains endogenous total GLP-1 levels and lowers circulating DPP-4 levels. This adds an argument in favor of using exenatide in the treatment of pediatric obesity.
CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT02794402.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38027106 ↗
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