Systemic and gut microbiome changes with metformin and liraglutide in youth-onset type 2 diabetes: the MIGHTY study.
Gut Microbes · 2025
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 3-month study of 25 African American youth with type 2 diabetes, participants were split into two groups: one taking metformin alone and the other taking metformin plus liraglutide. Both groups showed changes in gut bacteria, with metformin alone increasing certain bacteria and reducing others, while the combination therapy increased different bacteria. The metformin group also had higher levels of specific bile acids in their blood, and one of these bile acids was linked to lower fasting blood sugar levels.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Gut Microbes, 2025 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 6 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.37 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
Metformin (Met) and liraglutide (Lira) are preferred diabetes therapies that may improve glycemia by modulating the gut microbiome, but the mechanisms and pathways are unknown and few data exist in youth-onset type 2 diabetes (Y-T2D). In a 3-month parallel clinical trial in African American Y-T2D randomized to Met ( = 14) or Met+Lira ( = 11), we compared gut microbial composition and metabolomic profiles and determined the relationship of changes in microbial abundance with glycemia and plasma metabolites. After 3 months, Met was associated with greater relative abundance of and and lower ( < 0.05). Met+Lira was associated with greater and lower ( < 0.05). Met group had increased (>1.5-fold) plasma cholic secondary bile acids (sulfochenodeoxycholic acid, nutriacholic acid, alpha-muricholic acid, and C24 dihydroxy bile acid; ≤ 0.002). The change in nutriacholic acid correlated with lower fasting glucose ( = -0.7, < 0.05). Shifts in microbiota taxa were not associated with plasma short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), hemoglobin A1c or glucose. Short-term Met and Met+Lira in Y-T2D were related to distinct shifts toward bile acid and SCFA-producing gut microbiota taxa, and secondary bile acid metabolites correlated with improved glycemia, suggesting bile acid pathways may be important modulators of glycemia in youth on metformin.: NCT02960659.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41020378 ↗
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