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Tesamorelin

Egrifta, TH9507

Quick Stats
Studies 64
Trials 24
Score 3
2011 pubmed

Effects of tesamorelin on inflammatory markers in HIV patients with excess abdominal fat: relationship with visceral adipose reduction.

Stanley. Takara L TL; Falutz. Julian J; Mamputu. Jean-Claude JC; Soulban. Graziella G; Potvin. Diane D; Grinspoon. Steven K SK

Key Findings

  • Tesamorelin reduced visceral adipose tissue (VAT) in HIV patients with abdominal obesity.
  • Treatment led to a modest decrease in tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) antigen and an increase in adiponectin, both associated with reduced VAT.
  • Changes in inflammatory markers (PAI-1, tPA, adiponectin) correlated with the amount of VAT loss, independent of IGF-1 changes.

Practical Outcomes

  • Tesamorelin may help lower belly fat and modestly improve certain inflammation‑related blood markers, but the effects are small and studied only in HIV‑positive individuals. For biohackers, it suggests potential metabolic benefits of VAT reduction, yet the drug is prescription‑only, expensive, and not proven for general anti‑aging use. Caution and medical supervision are essential before considering it.

Summary

In HIV patients with a lot of belly fat, a daily injection of tesamorelin for six months lowered visceral fat and slightly improved blood markers linked to inflammation and clot breakdown, especially adiponectin. The changes were modest and the study says more research is needed to know if these benefits matter for health.

Abstract

To report the effects of tesamorelin, a growth hormone-releasing hormone analogue, on inflammatory and fibrinolytic markers and to relate these effects to changes in visceral adipose tissue (VAT). Four hundred and ten HIV-infected patients with abdominal adiposity were randomized to 2 mg tesamorelin (n = 273) or placebo (n = 137) subcutaneously daily for 26 weeks. Circulating plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) antigen, tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) antigen, C-reactive protein (CRP), and adiponectin were assessed. At baseline, VAT was significantly associated with PAI-1 antigen (ρ = 0.36, P < 0.001), tPA antigen (ρ = 0.29, P < 0.001), CRP (ρ = 0.18, P < 0.001), and adiponectin (ρ = -0.22, P < 0.001). Treatment with tesamorelin resulted in a significant decrease from baseline in tPA antigen (-2.2 ± 2.5 vs. -1.6 ± 2.9 ng/ml, tesamorelin vs. placebo, P < 0.05). Changes in PAI-1 antigen were not significant in the tesamorelin group compared to placebo. Among patients receiving tesamorelin, changes in inflammatory markers were associated with change in VAT (PAI-1 antigen: ρ = 0.16, P = 0.02; tPA antigen: ρ = 0.16, P = 0.02; adiponectin: ρ = -0.27, P < 0.001), and these associations remained significant when controlling for changes in insulin-like growth factor-1. In HIV patients with abdominal adiposity, tesamorelin may have a modest beneficial effect on adiponectin and fibrinolytic markers in association with changes in VAT. Further studies are needed to determine the clinical significance of these changes. These data further highlight the deleterious role of excessive VAT and the utility of strategies to improve VAT in this population.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-06-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1097/qad.0b013e328347f3f1