Long-term safety and effects of tesamorelin, a growth hormone-releasing factor analogue, in HIV patients with abdominal fat accumulation.
Falutz. Julian J; Allas. Soraya S; Mamputu. Jean-Claude JC; Potvin. Diane D; Kotler. Donald D; Somero. Michael M; Berger. Daniel D; Brown. Stephen S; Richmond. Gary G; Fessel. Jeffrey J; Turner. Ralph R; Grinspoon. Steven S
Key Findings
- 52 weeks of tesamorelin reduced visceral adipose tissue by ~18% and triglycerides by ~51 mg/dL.
- The drug was well tolerated; adverse event rates were similar to placebo and glucose levels stayed stable.
- Visceral fat quickly returned after stopping tesamorelin, indicating the effect is treatment‑dependent.
Practical Outcomes
- Tesamorelin can be considered a potent, relatively safe way to shrink deep belly fat and improve lipid profiles, but you must stay on it to keep the benefits. For biohackers, the data suggest that continuous dosing is required and that glucose metabolism is unlikely to be worsened, though the drug is currently approved only for HIV‑related fat loss.
Summary
In HIV patients with excess belly fat, daily injections of tesamorelin for a year safely cut deep abdominal fat (visceral fat) by about 18% and lowered triglycerides dramatically, without causing major blood‑sugar problems. The benefits disappear once the drug is stopped.
Abstract
Treatment of HIV patients with daily tesamorelin, a growth hormone-releasing factor analogue, for 26 weeks resulted in a significant decrease in visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and improvement in lipids. The objective of the 26-week extension phase was to evaluate long-term safety and effects of tesamorelin. HIV patients with central fat accumulation in the context of antiretroviral therapy were randomized to tesamorelin 2 mg (n = 273) or placebo (n = 137) s.c. daily for 26 weeks. At week 26, patients originally on tesamorelin were rerandomized to 2 mg tesamorelin (T-T group, n = 154) or placebo (T-P group, n = 50), whereas patients originally on placebo were switched to tesamorelin (P-T group, n = 111). Safety included adverse events and glucose parameters. Tesamorelin was generally well tolerated. The prevalence of adverse events and serious adverse events during the extension phase was comparable with the initial phase. Changes in glucose parameters over 52 weeks were not clinically significant and similar to those after 26 weeks. The change in VAT was sustained at -18% over 52 weeks of treatment (P < 0.001 versus baseline) as was the change in triglycerides (-51 mg/dl, P < 0.001 versus baseline). Similar sustained beneficial effects were seen for total cholesterol, but high-density lipoprotein decreased minimally over 52 weeks. Upon discontinuation of tesamorelin, VAT reaccumulated. Treatment with tesamorelin was generally well tolerated and resulted in sustained decreases in VAT and triglycerides over 52 weeks without aggravating glucose. Though effects on VAT are sustained during treatment for 52 weeks, these effects do not last beyond the duration of treatment.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-09-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1097/qad.0b013e32830a5058