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Development of a glucagon sensitivity test in humans:Pilot data and the GLUSENTIC study protocol

Authors :
Sasha A.S. Kjeldsen
Michael M. Richter
Nicole J. Jensen
Malin S.D. Nilsson
Niklas Heinz
Janus D. Nybing
Frederik H. Linden
Erik Høgh-Schmidt
Mikael P. Boesen
Sten Madsbad
Hendrik Vilstrup
Frank Vinholt Schiødt
Andreas Møller
Kirsten Nørgaard
Signe Schmidt
Elias B. Rashu
Lise L. Gluud
Steen B. Haugaard
Jens J. Holst
Jørgen Rungby
Nicolai J. Wewer Albrechtsen
Source :
Kjeldsen, S A S, Richter, M M, Jensen, N J, Nilsson, M S D, Heinz, N, Nybing, J D, Linden, F H, Høgh-Schmidt, E, Boesen, M P, Madsbad, S, Vilstrup, H, Schiødt, F V, Møller, A, Nørgaard, K, Schmidt, S, Rashu, E B, Gluud, L L, Haugaard, S B, Holst, J J, Rungby, J & Wewer Albrechtsen, N J 2023, ' Development of a glucagon sensitivity test in humans : Pilot data and the GLUSENTIC study protocol ', Peptides, vol. 161, 170938 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.peptides.2022.170938
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

A physiological feedback system exists between hepatocytes and the alpha cells, termed the liver-alpha cell axis and refers to the relationship between amino acid-stimulated glucagon secretion and glucagon-stimulated amino acid catabolism. Several reports indicate that non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) disrupts the liver-alpha cell axis, because of impaired glucagon receptor signaling (glucagon resistance). However, no experimental test exists to assess glucagon resistance in humans. The objective was to develop an experimental test to determine glucagon sensitivity with respect to amino acid and glucose metabolism in humans. The proposed glucagon sensitivity test (comprising two elements: 1) i.v. injection of 0.2 mg glucagon and 2) infusion of mixed amino acids 331 mg/hour/kg) is based on nine pilot studies which are presented. Calculation of a proposed glucagon sensitivity index with respect to amino acid catabolism is also described. Secondly, we describe a complete study protocol (GLUSENTIC) according to which the glucagon sensitivity test will be applied in a cross-sectional study currently taking place. 65 participants including 20 individuals with a BMI 18.6–25 kg/m2, 30 individuals with a BMI ≥ 25–40 kg/m2, and 15 individuals with type 1 diabetes with a BMI between 18.6 and 40 kg/m2 will be included. Participants will be grouped according to their degree of hepatic steatosis measured by whole-liver magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The primary outcome measure will be differences in the glucagon sensitivity index between individuals with and without hepatic steatosis. Developing a glucagon sensitivity test and index may provide insight into the physiological and pathophysiological mechanism of glucagon action and glucagon-based therapies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kjeldsen, S A S, Richter, M M, Jensen, N J, Nilsson, M S D, Heinz, N, Nybing, J D, Linden, F H, Høgh-Schmidt, E, Boesen, M P, Madsbad, S, Vilstrup, H, Schiødt, F V, Møller, A, Nørgaard, K, Schmidt, S, Rashu, E B, Gluud, L L, Haugaard, S B, Holst, J J, Rungby, J & Wewer Albrechtsen, N J 2023, ' Development of a glucagon sensitivity test in humans : Pilot data and the GLUSENTIC study protocol ', Peptides, vol. 161, 170938 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.peptides.2022.170938
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fa7d70f6ae68bbda8b6c4b8ff7a9ceb4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.peptides.2022.170938