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Consultation - Hormone Injections

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(@deborah)
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New Hormone Injection Aids Weight Loss In Obese Patients

 

 

 

The findings came from a small study in which patients lost on average 4.4kg and the treatment led to substantial improvements to their blood glucose, with some patients’ reducing to near-normal levels.

Obesity is a common problem in the UK and it is estimated that one in four adults are obese.

 

One of the most common types of weight loss surgery is a procedure known as gastric bypass surgery, which can be very effective in keeping excess weight off and improving blood sugar levels in diabetics. However, some patients decide against surgery and the procedure can cause complications such as abdominal pain, chronic nausea, vomiting and debilitating low blood sugar levels.

Previous research by Imperial College London suggested that one of the reasons why gastric bypass surgery works so well is because three specific hormones originating from the bowels are released in higher levels. This hormone combination, called ‘GOP’ for short, reduces appetite, causes weight loss and improves the body’s ability to use the sugar absorbed from eating.

Researchers wanted to see if infusing patients with the GOP hormones glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), oxyntomodulin and peptide, to mimic the high levels seen after surgery, could aid weight loss and reduce high glucose levels.

Fifteen patients were given the GOP treatment for four weeks using a pump that slowly injects the GOP mixture under the skin for 12 hours a day, beginning one hour before breakfast and disconnecting after their last meal of the day. Patients also received dietetic advice on healthy eating and weight loss from a dietician.

 

Professor Tricia Tan, Professor of Practice (Metabolic Medicine & Endocrinology) at Imperial College London and lead author of the study, said:

“Obesity and type 2 diabetes can lead to very serious and potentially life-threatening conditions such as cancer, stroke and heart disease. There is a real need to find new medicines so we can improve and save the lives of many patients. Although this is a small study our new combination hormone treatment is promising and has shown significant improvements in patients’ health in only four weeks. Compared to other methods the treatment is non-invasive and reduced glucose levels to near-normal levels in our patients.”

The work, published in Diabetes Care and presented at the American Diabetes Association 79th Scientific Sessions meeting at San Francisco, took place at Imperial College London in collaboration with University of Copenhagen and University College Dublin. The treatment was trialled on patients at the National Institute for Health Research Imperial Clinical Research Facility at Hammersmith Hospital, part of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust.

 

Twenty-six obese patients with prediabetes (when blood glucose is too high but not high enough to be classified as diabetes) and those with diabetes were recruited to the study at Hammersmith Hospital from July 2016 to October 2018. Fifteen patients were randomly selected to receive the hormone treatment and 11 patients were given a saline (salt water) infusion as a placebo over a four-week period. The team also recruited 21 patients who had undergone bariatric surgery and 22 patients who followed a very low-calorie diet to compare the results of GOP. All patients were given a glucose monitoring device to track their glucose levels following treatment.

In the trial, patients on the GOP treatment lost an average of 4.4kg, compared with 2.5kg for participants receiving a saline placebo. The treatment also had no side effects.

However, patients who received bariatric surgery or who followed a very low calorie diet lost significantly more weight than GOP patients. The changes in weight were 10.3kg for bariatric patient and 8.3kg for patients who followed a very low calorie diet.

Professor Tan commented: “Although the weight loss was smaller, using the GOP infusion would be preferable as it has fewer side effects than bariatric surgery. This result shows that it is possible to obtain some of the benefits of a gastric bypass operation without undergoing the surgery itself. If further trials are successful, in future we could potentially give this type of treatment to many more patients.”

The team also found that GOP was capable of lowering blood glucose levels to near-normal levels, with little variation in the blood glucose. Patients who received bariatric surgery also had an overall improvement in blood glucose, but the levels were much more variable, leaving them vulnerable to low blood glucose levels.

The team aim to carry out a larger clinical trial to assess the impact of GOP on more patients over a longer period of time.

The research was funded by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) and the NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre.

This research is an example of the work carried out by Imperial College Academic Health Science Centre, a joint initiative between Imperial College London and three NHS hospital trusts. It aims to transform healthcare by turning scientific discoveries into medical advances to benefit local, national and global populations in as fast a timeframe as possible.

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(@tabethapetersoniectskin-com)
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Joined: 5 years ago
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This is exciting for people struggling with diabetes and I hope for further successful trials, but the idea that this is stated to have "no side effects" intrigues me since they only tested 15 people. I would wonder if someone who is vulnerable and struggling with their weight would see that and think this is an easy way out, truth is if you don't change your lifestyle (assuming weight gain is not from a medical condition or genes), no quick fixes will be the trick. 


   
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(@carliecannestroiectskin-com)
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I agree with Tabatha on this one that this treatment should be a last resort if it is safe enough and only be used as a last resort in severe cases where the person has already been following a healthy lifestyle, gone to a nutritionist, works out has gone to see a doctor and if none of that is still working then they should look into this. I have a friend who is overweight and she stresses out all the time, doesn't eat healthy and doesn't get enough rest and she is seeing a doctor who just throws pills at her that suppress her appetite which I don't think is right at all and I feel like people will approach it like a band-aid without trying to addressing the cause first because there's nothing worse than having to spend all your money on an expensive treatment like this only to gain the weight right back and there still isn't much known about this treatment and how it affects the body. 


   
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(@doreengreeniectskin-com)
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Bariatric surgery affects the body through multiple pathways; decreased physical capacity of the stomach, the length of the intestine is shortened thus decreasing the ability of the body to actually absorb all of the nutrients/calories taken in, and returning the body to metabolic homeostasis.

For those who are at the point of needing surgery taking an injection is not a one size fits all solution. For those who are not at a life-threatening point with weight, the risks of these injections outweigh the benefits in my opinion.

Type 2 diabetes is at epidemic proportions. This is a lifestyle illness that is completely preventable. Solutions such as juts taking a pill or short will not solve this problem. Even with surgery approximately 1/5th of patients go on to have Type 2 diabetes again. It is theorized that a large part of why metabolic homeostasis is regained post (RYGBP) bariatric surgery is due to the inability of the body to fully absorb calories and nutrients. If appetite suppression were truely a solution then drugs like phentermine would result in permanent weight loss. 

Weight loss is a complex problem. 


   
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(@leejenkinsiectskin-com)
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I think this research is very exciting.  But I don't think anything can replace eating healthier and exercising.  I've watched a few episodes of the show my 600lb life and most of these people on the show are food addicts.  And at some point if they comply with a prescribed diet they are approved for bypass surgery.  I wonder what would happen if they had access to some of these hormone injections .  Would they bother to change their eating habits at all?  Or would any of us for that matter.  Everybody wants a quick fix for weight related problems, its a multibillion dollar industry,  this research sounds promising and I'm sure we will hear more about it, I hope the research continues, in the meantime we all should pay more attention to the quality and the quantity of what we put in our mouths and try to control our appetities


   
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(@mikaylaalleniectskin-com)
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even though it says there are no side effect there could be long term health problems 


   
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(@deborah)
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Joined: 12 years ago
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@leejenkinsiectskin-com

I agree that the diet has to change along with lifestyle. People have the surgery and start out following a diet and then it seems to go away after a while. I think its exciting research but hormones are very powerful and how is the long term effects going to be a benefit or not


   
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