GLP-1 and glucose tolerance after sleeve gastrectomy in morbidly obese subjects with type 2 diabetes.

Author

Jiménez Pineda, Amanda

Mari, Andrea

Casamitjana i Abellà, Roser

Lacy Fortuny, Antonio Ma. de

Ferrannini, Ele

Vidal i Cortada, Josep

Publication date

2017-06-16T07:45:04Z

2017-06-16T07:45:04Z

2014-05-21

2017-06-16T07:45:04Z

Abstract

Although GLP-1 has been suggested as a major factor for the marked improvement of glucose tolerance commonly seen after sleeve gastrectomy (SG), several observations challenge this hypothesis. To better understand the role of GLP-1 in the remission of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) long term after SG in humans, we conducted two separate cross-sectional studies: 1) the GLP-1 response to a standardized mixed liquid meal (SMLM) was compared in subjects with T2DM antedating SG but with different long-term (>2 years) T2DM outcomes (remission, relapse, or lack of remission) (study 1) and 2) the effect of GLP-1 receptor blockade with exendin (9-39) on glucose tolerance was examined in subjects with T2DM antedating surgery, who had undergone SG and presented with long-term T2DM remission (study 2). In study 1, we observed a comparable GLP-1 response to the SMLM regardless of the post-SG outcome of T2DM. In study 2, the blockade of GLP-1 action resulted in impaired insulin secretion but limited deterioration of glucose tolerance. Thus, our data suggest the enhanced GLP-1 secretion observed long term after SG is neither sufficient nor critical to maintain normal glucose tolerance in subjects with T2DM antedating the surgery.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Obesitat mòrbida; Diabetis no-insulinodependent; Cirurgia digestiva; Estudi de casos; Morbid obesity; Non-insulin-dependent diabetes; Gastrointestinal surgery; Case studies

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.2337/db14-0357

Diabetes, 2014, vol. 63, num. 10, p. 3372-3377

https://doi.org/10.2337/db14-0357

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd (c) American Diabetes Association, 2014

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es