The effects of dose, nutrition, and age on hexarelin-induced anterior pituitary hormone secretion in adult patients on maintenance hemodialysis.
Jenkins. R C RC; El Nahas. A M AM; Wilkie. M E ME; Brown. C B CB; Jones. J J; Ghigo. E E; Ross. R J RJ
Key Findings
- 2 µg/kg IV hexarelin sharply increases GH compared with placebo
- GH response is similar in healthy controls and dialysis patients
- Older or well‑nourished subjects show a weaker GH rise; ACTH and cortisol also rise
Practical Outcomes
- A single IV dose of ~2 µg/kg can produce a short GH spike, but because it requires medical‑grade IV administration and the long‑term anabolic benefits are unknown, it isn’t ready for home use. Biohackers might note the dose‑response pattern and the age/nutrition influence, but should wait for oral formulations or longer‑term safety data before incorporating hexarelin into a regimen.
Summary
Hexarelin given by IV at about 2 µg per kg quickly raises growth‑hormone levels in both healthy people and kidney‑dialysis patients, with a slightly bigger effect in younger or malnourished subjects, but the boost fades with age and the study only looked at short‑term effects.
Abstract
Malnutrition is common in chronic renal failure (CRF) and adversely affects prognosis. In view of the anabolic action of GH in CRF, we have studied the effects of hexarelin, a GH secretagogue, on CRF. An iv dose-response study in six 20- to 40-yr-old well nourished hemodialysis (HD) patients was followed by administration of the maximally effective dose to six 20- to 40-yr-old healthy controls, six 20- to 40-yr-old poorly nourished HD patients, and six 50- to 70-yr-old poorly nourished HD patients. GH secretion (area under the curve over 180 min, mean +/- SE) after 2 and 1 microg/kg doses (10.7 +/- 4.2 and 8.2 +/- 5.2 min/U x L, respectively) was greater than after placebo (0.60 +/- 0.11 min/U x L; P < 0.001 and P < 0.05, respectively). The most effective dose (2 microg/kg) produced similar GH secretion (11.4 +/- 3.3 min/U x L) in controls. GH secretion in the younger poorly nourished HD group (19.0 +/- 4.4 min/U x L) was not significantly different from that in the well nourished 20- to 40-yr-old HD patients (P = 0.06). GH secretion in the older, poorly nourished HD patients (9.4 +/- 2.2 min/U x L) was similar to that in the young, poorly nourished group (P = 0.18). ACTH and cortisol concentrations increased in all groups, whereas PRL concentrations were not affected in CRF. The profound action of hexarelin on GH secretion has been shown to extend to CRF. Trends were evident toward increasing efficacy in malnourished subjects and decreasing efficacy with age. Further studies are required to determine whether the acute actions of hexarelin can be translated into long term anabolic changes.
Study Information
pubmed
1999
10.1210/jcem.84.4.5635