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Tesamorelin

Egrifta, TH9507

Quick Stats
Studies 64
Trials 24
Score 3
2024 pubmed 1 citations

Dietary regimens appear to possess significant effects on the development of combined antiretroviral therapy (cART)-associated metabolic syndrome.

Chege. Boniface M BM; Mwangi. Peter W PW; Githinji. Charles G CG; Bukachi. Frederick F

Key Findings

  • Low‑protein, high‑calorie (LPHC) diets worsen cART‑induced metabolic syndrome in rats.
  • Tesamorelin co‑administration reverses the diet‑ and drug‑driven increases in blood glucose, lipids, liver weight, hepatic triglycerides, and adiposity.
  • Growth hormone levels drop with cART alone but are maintained when tesamorelin is given.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study suggests tesamorelin could be a tool to counteract diet‑ and medication‑related metabolic stress, especially in contexts mimicking HIV therapy. However, the data are from an animal model, so human dosing, safety, and regulatory issues remain unresolved. Use with caution and consider clinical evidence before experimenting.

Summary

In rats, a high‑calorie, low‑protein diet combined with HIV drugs caused weight gain, high blood sugar, bad cholesterol, and liver fat. Adding tesamorelin, a synthetic hormone that boosts growth hormone release, largely prevented these metabolic problems.

Abstract

This study investigated the interactions between a low protein high calorie (LPHC) diet and an integrase inhibitor-containing antiretroviral drug regimen (INI-CR)in light of evidence suggesting that the initiation of cART in patients with poor nutritional status is a predictor of mortality independent of immune status. Freshly weaned Sprague Dawley rats (120) were randomized into the standard, LPHC and normal protein high calorie (NPHC) diet groups (n = 40/group) initially for 15 weeks. Thereafter, experimental animals in each diet group were further randomized into four treatment sub-groups (n = 10/group) Control (normal saline), group 1(TDF+3TC+DTG and Tesamorelin), group 2 (TDF+3TC+DTG), and Positive control (AZT+3TC+ATV/r) with treatment and diets combined for 9 weeks. Weekly body weights, fasting blood glucose (FBG), oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT); lipid profiles, liver weights, hepatic triglycerides and adiposity were assessed at week 24. At week 15, body weights increased between the diet group in phase 1(standard 146 ± 1.64 vs. 273.1 ± 1.56 g), (NPHC, 143.5 ± 2.40 vs. 390.2 ± 4.94 g) and (LPHC, 145.5 ± 2.28 g vs. 398.3 ± 4.89 g) (p< 0.0001). A similar increase was noted in the FBG and OGTT (p< 0.0001). In phase 2, there was an increase in FBG, OGTT, body weights, lipid profile, liver weights, hepatic triglycerides, adiposity and insulin levels in group 2 and positive control in both NPHC and LPHC diet groups (p<0.0001). Growth hormone levels were decreased in Tesamorelin-free group 2 and positive control in both NPHC and LPHC (p< 0.0001). The obesogenic activities of the LPHC diet exceeded that of the NPHC diet and interacted with both integrase-containing and classical cART drug regimens to reproduce cART associated metabolic dysregulation. The effects were however reversed by co-administration with tesamorelin, a synthetic growth hormone releasing hormone analogue.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-02-28T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0298752

Citations

1

References

49