Issue: May 2015
April 01, 2015
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Insulin therapy reduces liver fat burden in type 2 diabetes

Issue: May 2015
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Treatment with Lantus reduced total liver fat burden for patients with type 2 diabetes, according to research published in Diabetes Care.

Additionally, Victoza therapy did not significantly affect liver fat biomarkers. Reduction in liver fat fraction and glycemic control did not differ significantly between Lantus (insulin glargine recombinant, Sanofi Aventis) and Victoza (liraglutide, Novo Nordisk).

An Tang, MD, MSc, of Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal, in Québec, Canada, and colleagues from other institutions enrolled 35 patients with type 2 diabetes whose glycemia was not well-controlled with metformin alone or in combination with other oral agents. Participants were randomly assigned to receive 12 weeks of therapy with either insulin glargine or liraglutide and were examined in the clinic 1 week before beginning treatment, at baseline to begin treatment, and then at 1-month intervals for five more visits.

An Tang

An Tang

Liver fat burden was assessed by measuring liver proton density fat fraction (PDFF) with magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS); MRI was used to measure mean liver PDFF, total liver volume and total liver fat index.

At 12 weeks, the insulin group demonstrated a trend toward a reduction in PDFF measured by MRS (12.6% to 9.9%; P = .06). MRI assessments showed a significant reduction in PDFF (13.8% to 10.6%; P = .005), liver volume (2,010.6 to 1,858.7 mL; P = .01) and total liver fat index (304.4 vs. 209.3% per mL; P = .01). Liver metrics were unchanged in the liraglutide group. HbA1c improved significantly in both treatment groups: for insulin glargine 7.9% to 7.2% (62.5 to 55.2 mmol/mol; P = .005); for liraglutide 7.6% to 6.7% (59.8 to 50.2 mmol/mol; P < .001).

“The administration of insulin glargine therapy may reduce the liver fat burden in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, despite a stable body weight and body mass index observed in this treatment arm,”” Tang told Endocrine Today. “Magnetic resonance-based techniques were used as noninvasive biomarkers of liver fat in this trial because repeated liver biopsies would not have been acceptable for these patients with type 2 diabetes who were otherwise not known for chronic liver disease.” – by Jill Rollet

For more information:

An Tang, MD, MSc, can be reached at Tour Viger, 900 rue Saint-Denis, bureau R12.480, Centre de recherche du CHUM, Montréal Québec H2X 0A9, Canada; email: an.tang@umontreal.ca.

Disclosure: Tang reports speaker honoraria from Siemens Medical and Boehringer Ingelheim. He is on the scientific advisory board of Imagia. Please see the full study for a list of all other authors’ relevant financial disclosures.