Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trial
Official title:
A New Treatment Strategy of Adding Exenatide to Insulin Therapy for Patients With Type 2 Diabetes and Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD)
The primary aim of the study is to determine the impact on hepatic steatosis of replacing
premeal rapid-acting insulin for exenatide (Byetta) while maintaining bedtime long-acting
detemir (Levemir) insulin in well-controlled patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM)
and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).
Secondary aims are to learn: 1) the efficacy and safety of such approach and whether it is
an acceptable treatment strategy compared to intensified insulin therapy alone; 2)
mechanisms of action (i.e., effects on insulin secretion and insulin action); 3) its impact
on weight (i.e., can it prevent insulin-associated weight gain or cause weight loss) and
rates of hypoglycemia; 4) if it may improve specific plasma biomarkers of disease activity
in NAFLD and inflammatory markers common to both conditions - T2DM and NAFLD (i.e., hsCRP,
ICAM, VCAM, etc.).
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a major public health problem in the United States with
~2/3 of Americans that are overweight or frankly obese. Less well recognized is that obesity
and T2DM are fueling another "silent epidemic": non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).
In NAFLD, hepatic fat accumulation ranges from simple steatosis to severe steatohepatitis
(NASH), with necroinflammation and fibrosis that may progress to cirrhosis. Indeed, up to
40% of patients with NAFLD develop NASH and about ~15-20% of patients with NASH develop
cirrhosis after 10 years. NASH is believed to be the most common cause of cryptogenic
cirrhosis and ranking as the third leading indication for liver transplantation after
alcohol and hepatitis C. The distinction between simple steatosis and NASH can only be done
by means of a liver biopsy, but strategies that reduce fatty liver disease correlate with a
reduction in steatohepatitis and fibrosis.
It is estimated that ~1/3 of the general population of the United States have fatty liver
disease as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy (MRS), the gold-standard
technique. It is also affecting the pediatric population, and while the natural history
remains to be defined, most biopsies show some degree of fibrosis and cirrhosis has been
reported in children as young as 10 years of age. Moreover, in our experience using MRS for
the past several years, ~80% of patients with T2DM have NAFLD. If the above is extrapolated
to the overall population of the United States, there are ~15 million subjects with T2DM and
NAFLD and more than 50 million overweight/obese individuals with NAFLD.
As awareness of NAFLD/NASH increases, health care providers are now confronted with the
unique challenge of achieving good metabolic control while treating fatty liver disease in
the same subject. Inadequate glycemic control appears to worsen and accelerate progression
of fatty liver disease. Paradoxically, most patients with T2DM do not reach established
treatment goals. Moreover, it appears that the way metabolic control achieved is important
in NAFLD: while metformin may be beneficial in NASH and pioglitazone is highly effective
(Belfort/Cusi et al, NEJM 2006), control of hyperglycemia by insulin therapy alone has
modest benefit on hepatic fat accumulation (Cusi, unpublished). In addition, long-term
insulin therapy in T2DM is frequently associated with inadequate compliance, weight gain,
frequent hypoglycemia and overall poor patient satisfaction. This is of great concern as
~35-40% of patients with T2DM are treated with insulin. Therefore, there is an unmet need to
find better ways to treat patients that fail oral agent therapy, targeting both
hyperglycemia and excessive liver fatty deposition.
We propose a strategy of adding exenatide to insulin therapy as a means to achieve better
glycemic control while ameliorating hepatic steatosis (and improving hepatic insulin
sensitivity), reduce body weight/total body fat (and visceral fat?), decrease the risk of
hypoglycemia by allowing a reduction in insulin doses (withdrawal of premeal insulin doses,
reduction of basal long-acting insulin), and enhance insulin secretion and insulin action
while improving the quality of life of patients with T2DM and NAFLD. As both T2DM and NAFLD
will become more prevalent in the near future, this pilot study will likely set the stage
for a large controlled multicenter trial with an approach that may be more effective than
intensified insulin therapy alone.
The central hypothesis is that insulin resistance and fat-overload play a key role in
NAFLD/NASH, a condition believed to arise at the molecular level from the inability of the
mitochondria to adapt to fat oversupply (Cusi, Current Diabetes Reports 2009). Excessive
fatty acid flux from exogenous (dietary) and endogenous (insulin resistant adipose
tissue/increased lipolysis) sources drive hepatic lipogenesis. Exenatide would potentially
be a good treatment fit against hepatic steatosis by decreasing excess dietary intake and
substrate supply, reducing fat mass and plasma FFA and by lowering exogenous insulin needs
and chronic hyperinsulinemia. Mitigating chronic hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia is
important as they drive hepatic fat synthesis through sterol regulatory element-binding
protein 1c (SREBP-1c) and carbohydrate regulatory element-binding protein (ChREBP) activity,
respectively. Weight loss may also subdue systemic inflammation generated by dysfunctional
adipose tissue, and at the local (hepatic) level, ameliorate fat-induced mitochondrial
dysfunction (i.e., activation of Kupffer cells, local production of cytokines, etc.).
While no systematic studies have been published yet, exenatide has been shown to reverse
hepatic steatosis in an obese animal model of NAFLD (Ding et al, Hepatology 2006) and in a
case report in a 59 year old poorly controlled T2DM patient in whom liver fat by MRS was
reduced from 15.8% to 4.3% (Tushuizen et al, Liver International 2006). Dietary intervention
remains as the current standard of care for NAFLD, but studies in general have been small,
uncontrolled and led to variable histological results. It is widely accepted that weight
loss is difficult to achieve and even harder to maintain in the long-term. Moreover, weight
loss is particularly difficult in patients with T2DM on insulin therapy. Pharmacological
therapy at large has been ineffective in NAFLD/NASH, including trials using antioxidants and
cytoprotective agents such as pentoxyfilline, vitamin E and ursodeoxycholic acid. A modest
benefit has been reported in small studies with metformin, but only our study using
pioglitazone has shown in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial, to be truly effective and
safe in the treatment of patients with IGT or T2DM and NASH.
Considering the impact that NAFLD has on patients with T2DM as a serious co-morbidity
ranging from its metabolic impact on glycemia and dyslipidemia, to potentially causing
end-stage liver disease and cardiovascular disease, it is rather surprising that no prior
studies have focused on novel pharmacological approaches such as the one proposed for the
treatment of patients with NAFLD and T2DM.
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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