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OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion?
Context: Active acromegaly is associated with impaired glucose metabolism, which improves upon treatment. Treatment with first generation somatostatin analogues (SSA) has a detrimental effect on insulin secretion, but the effect on glucose homeostasis is neutralized by the reduction in growth hormon...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207322/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1827 |
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author | Jørgensen, miss, Nanna Thurmann Erichsen, Trine Møller Klose, Marianne C Jørgensen, Morten Buus Idorn, Thomas Rasmussen, Bo F Holst, Jens J Rasmussen, Ulla Feldt |
author_facet | Jørgensen, miss, Nanna Thurmann Erichsen, Trine Møller Klose, Marianne C Jørgensen, Morten Buus Idorn, Thomas Rasmussen, Bo F Holst, Jens J Rasmussen, Ulla Feldt |
author_sort | Jørgensen, miss, Nanna Thurmann |
collection | PubMed |
description | Context: Active acromegaly is associated with impaired glucose metabolism, which improves upon treatment. Treatment with first generation somatostatin analogues (SSA) has a detrimental effect on insulin secretion, but the effect on glucose homeostasis is neutralized by the reduction in growth hormone (GH) and Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1). Treatment with GH receptor antagonists has a more favorable effect on glucose homeostasis. Objective: To describe the secretion of glucose, insulin, glucagon, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP1), and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) in surgically treated patients with acromegaly treated or not with somatostatin analogues, either as monotherapy (SSA) or in co-treatment with pegvisomant (SSA+PEG), respectively, compared to healthy controls. Methods: Descriptive study of data from 23 surgically treated, non-diabetic patients with acromegaly and 6 healthy controls. After an overnight fast, all participants underwent a three-hour 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and subsequently a three-hour isoglycaemic intravenous glucose infusion on a separate day. Analysis: Baseline hormone concentrations, time to peak and area under the curve (AUC) on the OGTT-day, and the incretin effect in the patient groups and controls were compared using analysis of variance with post-hoc analysis. Results: The total group of patients treated with somatostatin analogues (N=15) had numerically impaired glucose, insulin, GLP1 and glucagon responses (AUC, P>0.05 respectively), and an impaired GIP-response (AUC, P=0.007) during OGTT as compared to patients not treated with somatostatin analogues and healthy controls. Similarly, the incretin effect was numerically impaired. Patients co-treated with pegvisomant (SSA+PEG, N=4) had a numerically increased secretion of insulin and glucagon compared to patients on SSA (N=11) during OGTT (insulin AUC mean (SEM), SSA+PEG 49 nmol/l*min (8.3) vs SSA 25 (3.4), P>0.05) [healthy controls 62 (13.6)]; glucagon AUC, SSA+PEG 823 pmol/l*min (194) vs SSA 332 (69), P>0.05) [healthy controls 946 (233)]). GIP secretion remained significantly impaired, whereas GLP1 secretion was numerically increased with PEG (SSA+PEG 3088 pmol/l*min (366) vs SSA 2401 (239), P>0.05) [healthy controls 3972 (451)] but remained without a glucose-dependant increase as in SSA. The incretin effect numerically increased in SSA+PEG compared to SSA (SSA+PEG 49.9% (13.9) vs SSA 33.6% (47.4), P>0.05) [healthy controls 55.5% (7.7)]. Conclusion: Somatostatin analogues impaired the secretion of both insulin, glucagon and incretin hormones secretion. Co-treatment with pegvisomant seemed to counteract the somatostatinergic inhibition of the glucagon secretion and improved the insulin response to OGTT. We speculate that pegvisomant exerts its action via GH-receptors on pancreatic δ-cells. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7207322 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-72073222020-05-12 OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion? Jørgensen, miss, Nanna Thurmann Erichsen, Trine Møller Klose, Marianne C Jørgensen, Morten Buus Idorn, Thomas Rasmussen, Bo F Holst, Jens J Rasmussen, Ulla Feldt J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Context: Active acromegaly is associated with impaired glucose metabolism, which improves upon treatment. Treatment with first generation somatostatin analogues (SSA) has a detrimental effect on insulin secretion, but the effect on glucose homeostasis is neutralized by the reduction in growth hormone (GH) and Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1). Treatment with GH receptor antagonists has a more favorable effect on glucose homeostasis. Objective: To describe the secretion of glucose, insulin, glucagon, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP1), and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) in surgically treated patients with acromegaly treated or not with somatostatin analogues, either as monotherapy (SSA) or in co-treatment with pegvisomant (SSA+PEG), respectively, compared to healthy controls. Methods: Descriptive study of data from 23 surgically treated, non-diabetic patients with acromegaly and 6 healthy controls. After an overnight fast, all participants underwent a three-hour 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and subsequently a three-hour isoglycaemic intravenous glucose infusion on a separate day. Analysis: Baseline hormone concentrations, time to peak and area under the curve (AUC) on the OGTT-day, and the incretin effect in the patient groups and controls were compared using analysis of variance with post-hoc analysis. Results: The total group of patients treated with somatostatin analogues (N=15) had numerically impaired glucose, insulin, GLP1 and glucagon responses (AUC, P>0.05 respectively), and an impaired GIP-response (AUC, P=0.007) during OGTT as compared to patients not treated with somatostatin analogues and healthy controls. Similarly, the incretin effect was numerically impaired. Patients co-treated with pegvisomant (SSA+PEG, N=4) had a numerically increased secretion of insulin and glucagon compared to patients on SSA (N=11) during OGTT (insulin AUC mean (SEM), SSA+PEG 49 nmol/l*min (8.3) vs SSA 25 (3.4), P>0.05) [healthy controls 62 (13.6)]; glucagon AUC, SSA+PEG 823 pmol/l*min (194) vs SSA 332 (69), P>0.05) [healthy controls 946 (233)]). GIP secretion remained significantly impaired, whereas GLP1 secretion was numerically increased with PEG (SSA+PEG 3088 pmol/l*min (366) vs SSA 2401 (239), P>0.05) [healthy controls 3972 (451)] but remained without a glucose-dependant increase as in SSA. The incretin effect numerically increased in SSA+PEG compared to SSA (SSA+PEG 49.9% (13.9) vs SSA 33.6% (47.4), P>0.05) [healthy controls 55.5% (7.7)]. Conclusion: Somatostatin analogues impaired the secretion of both insulin, glucagon and incretin hormones secretion. Co-treatment with pegvisomant seemed to counteract the somatostatinergic inhibition of the glucagon secretion and improved the insulin response to OGTT. We speculate that pegvisomant exerts its action via GH-receptors on pancreatic δ-cells. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207322/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1827 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com |
spellingShingle | Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Jørgensen, miss, Nanna Thurmann Erichsen, Trine Møller Klose, Marianne C Jørgensen, Morten Buus Idorn, Thomas Rasmussen, Bo F Holst, Jens J Rasmussen, Ulla Feldt OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion? |
title | OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion? |
title_full | OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion? |
title_fullStr | OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion? |
title_full_unstemmed | OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion? |
title_short | OR23-06 Is the Improved Glucose Homeostasis in Patients with Acromegaly Treated with Pegvisomant Caused by Improved Glucagon Secretion? |
title_sort | or23-06 is the improved glucose homeostasis in patients with acromegaly treated with pegvisomant caused by improved glucagon secretion? |
topic | Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207322/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1827 |
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