Predictors of Treatment Response to Tesamorelin, a Growth Hormone-Releasing Factor Analog, in HIV-Infected Patients with Excess Abdominal Fat.
Mangili. Alexandra A; Falutz. Julian J; Mamputu. Jean-Claude JC; Stepanians. Miganush M; Hayward. Brooke B
Key Findings
- Tesamorelin reduced visceral adipose tissue (VAT) significantly after 6 months in HIV‑infected patients.
- Patients with baseline metabolic syndrome (NCEP), triglycerides >1.7 mmol/L, or white race were more likely to respond.
- Odds of achieving VAT <140 cm² were 3.9‑fold higher with tesamorelin versus placebo after adjusting for BMI, gender, and baseline VAT.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in visceral fat loss, tesamorelin appears effective but its proven benefit is limited to HIV‑positive individuals with lipodystrophy. If you have metabolic syndrome or high triglycerides, you might see a stronger response. However, the drug is prescription‑only and not widely studied in healthy populations, so using it off‑label carries unknown risks and requires medical supervision.
Summary
Tesamorelin, a synthetic hormone that boosts growth hormone release, was shown to cut deep belly fat (visceral fat) in HIV patients with excess abdominal fat. After six months, people on tesamorelin were almost four times more likely to get their visceral fat below a health‑risk threshold (140 cm²) compared to placebo. The biggest responders tended to have metabolic syndrome (by NCEP criteria), high triglycerides, or be white.
Abstract
Tesamorelin, a synthetic analog of human growth hormone-releasing factor, decreases visceral adipose tissue (VAT) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients with lipodystrophy. 1) To evaluate the utility of patient characteristics and validated disease-risk scores, namely indicator variables for the metabolic syndrome defined by the International Diabetes Federation (MetS-IDF) or the National Cholesterol Education Program (MetS-NCEP) and the Framingham Risk Score (FRS), as predictors of VAT reduction during tesamorelin therapy at 3 and 6 months, and 2) To explore the characteristics of patients who reached a threshold of VAT <140 cm2, a level associated with lower risk of adverse health outcomes, after 6 months of treatment with tesamorelin. Data were analyzed from two Phase 3 studies in which HIV-infected patients with excess abdominal fat were randomized in a 2:1 ratio to receive tesamorelin 2 mg (n = 543) or placebo (n = 263) subcutaneously daily for 6 months, using ANOVA and ANCOVA models. Metabolic syndrome (MetS-IDF or MetS-NCEP) and FRS were significantly associated with VAT at baseline. Presence of metabolic syndrome ([MetS-NCEP), triglyceride levels >1.7 mmol/L, and white race had a significant impact on likelihood of response to tesamorelin after 6 months of therapy (interaction p-values 0.054, 0.063, and 0.025, respectively). No predictive factors were identified at 3 months. The odds of a VAT reduction to <140 cm2 for subjects treated with tesamorelin was 3.9 times greater than that of subjects randomized to placebo after controlling for study, gender, baseline body mass index (BMI) and baseline VAT (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.03; 7.44). Individuals with baseline MetS-NCEP, elevated triglyceride levels, or white race were most likely to experience reductions in VAT after 6 months of tesamorelin treatment. The odds of response of VAT <140 cm2 was 3.9 times greater for tesamorelin-treated patients than that of patients receiving placebo.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-10-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0140358
6
68