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Tesamorelin

Egrifta, TH9507

Quick Stats
Studies 64
Trials 24
Score 4
2024 pubmed

Efficacy and safety of tesamorelin in people with HIV on integrase inhibitors.

Russo. Samuel C SC; Ockene. Mollie W MW; Arpante. Allison K AK; Johnson. Julia E JE; Lee. Hang H; Toribio. Mabel M; Stanley. Takara L TL; Hadigan. Colleen M CM; Grinspoon. Steven K SK; Erlandson. Kristine M KM; Fourman. Lindsay T LT

Key Findings

  • Tesamorelin cut visceral (abdominal) fat area by about 25 cm² versus a 14 cm² increase in the placebo group.
  • Hepatic (liver) fat dropped roughly 4 % with tesamorelin, while the placebo group showed no meaningful change.
  • The trunk‑to‑appendicular fat ratio improved modestly, indicating a healthier body‑fat pattern.
  • Adverse events, including episodes of high blood sugar, were similar between tesamorelin and placebo, showing good tolerability.

Practical Outcomes

  • For HIV patients on integrase inhibitors, adding tesamorelin 2 mg daily could be a viable strategy to combat stubborn abdominal and liver fat gain. The study supports a 12‑month treatment window with regular MRI/DXA monitoring to track changes. Safety appears comparable to placebo, so glycemic monitoring remains prudent but no major new risks were observed.

Summary

In people living with HIV who are taking modern integrase inhibitor drugs, a daily 2 mg dose of the peptide tesamorelin for a year significantly shrank belly fat, reduced liver fat, and improved overall body‑fat distribution without worsening blood sugar control.

Abstract

Tesamorelin is the only FDA-approved therapy to treat abdominal fat accumulation in people with HIV (PWH). Phase III clinical trials were conducted prior to the introduction of integrase inhibitors (INSTIs), which are now a mainstay of HIV antiretroviral therapy. We leveraged a randomized double-blind trial of 61 PWH and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease to evaluate the efficacy and safety of tesamorelin 2 mg once daily vs. identical placebo among participants on INSTI-based regimens at baseline. In the parent clinical trial, visceral fat cross-sectional area, hepatic fat fraction, and trunk-to-appendicular fat ratio were quantified using magnetic resonance imaging, proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, respectively, at baseline and 12 months. Metabolic and safety outcomes were compared between treatment arms. Among 38 participants on INSTI-based regimens at baseline, 15 individuals on tesamorelin and 16 individuals on placebo completed the 12-month study. Tesamorelin led to significant declines in visceral fat (median [interquartile range]: -25 [-93, -2] vs. 14 [3, 41] cm 2 , P  = 0.001), hepatic fat (-4.2% [-12.3%, -2.7%] vs. -0.5% [-3.9%, 2.7%], P  = 0.01), and trunk-to-appendicular fat ratio (-0.1 [-0.3, 0.0] vs. 0.0 [-0.1, 0.1], P  = 0.03). Tesamorelin was well tolerated with a similar frequency of adverse events, including hyperglycemia, between groups. The current analysis provides the first dedicated data on the efficacy and safety of tesamorelin among PWH on INSTI-based regimens. Despite the association of INSTI use with weight gain and adipose tissue dysfunction, tesamorelin had beneficial effects on body composition with no exacerbation of glycemic control.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-06-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1097/qad.0000000000003965