OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to analyze the effect of pioglitazone (PIO) and simvastatin (SIMVA) on adiponectin and visfatin concentrations in nondiabetic patients with metabolic syndrome and increased risk for cardiovascular complications in a prospective randomized clinical trial. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: One-hundred twenty-five nondiabetic patients with increased cardiovascular risk [78 females, 47 males, age (mean+/-STD:58.6+/-7.8years, BMI:30.8+/-4.2(kg/m2] were included after randomization to PIO+lacebo, SIMVA+placebo, or PIO+SIMVA treatment for 3 months. At baseline and endpoint, measurements of HbA1c, glucose, insulin, LDL cholesterol, adiponectin and visfatin were performed. Insulin resistance was assessed by means of the HOMAIR-score. RESULTS: Improvement in the HOMAIR-score was observed with PIO and the combination, but not with SIMVA alone, which was accompanied by an increase in adiponectin with PIO treatment groups, but a decrease with SIMVA alone (baseline/endpoint: PIO: 14.0+/-8.2 mg/l/ 27.6+/- 14.5 mg/l, p<0.05; PIO+SIMVA: 11.7+/-10.0 mg/l/26.7+/-15.7 mg/l, p<0.05; SIMVA: 15.5+/-12.7 mg/l/ 11.6+/-7.0 mg/l, p<0.05). No change could be observed in the visfatin concentrations (PIO: 47.6+/-14.5 ng/ml/48.0+/-11.6 ng/ml, PIO+SIMVA: 45.1+/-10.9 ng/ml/47.9+/-10.1 ng/ml, SIMVA: 49.2+/- 13.4 ng/ml/52.1+/-16.7 ng/ml, n. s. in all cases). CONCLUSIONS:Insulin resistance and/or cardiovascular risk indicators were not associated with visfatin levels. Regulation of visfatin secretion occurs through biochemical pathways independent from those influenced by pioglitazone or simvastatin.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to analyze the effect of pioglitazone (PIO) and simvastatin (SIMVA) on adiponectin and visfatin concentrations in nondiabeticpatients with metabolic syndrome and increased risk for cardiovascular complications in a prospective randomized clinical trial. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: One-hundred twenty-five nondiabeticpatients with increased cardiovascular risk [78 females, 47 males, age (mean+/-STD:58.6+/-7.8years, BMI:30.8+/-4.2(kg/m2] were included after randomization to PIO+lacebo, SIMVA+placebo, or PIO+SIMVA treatment for 3 months. At baseline and endpoint, measurements of HbA1c, glucose, insulin, LDL cholesterol, adiponectin and visfatin were performed. Insulin resistance was assessed by means of the HOMAIR-score. RESULTS: Improvement in the HOMAIR-score was observed with PIO and the combination, but not with SIMVA alone, which was accompanied by an increase in adiponectin with PIO treatment groups, but a decrease with SIMVA alone (baseline/endpoint: PIO: 14.0+/-8.2 mg/l/ 27.6+/- 14.5 mg/l, p<0.05; PIO+SIMVA: 11.7+/-10.0 mg/l/26.7+/-15.7 mg/l, p<0.05; SIMVA: 15.5+/-12.7 mg/l/ 11.6+/-7.0 mg/l, p<0.05). No change could be observed in the visfatin concentrations (PIO: 47.6+/-14.5 ng/ml/48.0+/-11.6 ng/ml, PIO+SIMVA: 45.1+/-10.9 ng/ml/47.9+/-10.1 ng/ml, SIMVA: 49.2+/- 13.4 ng/ml/52.1+/-16.7 ng/ml, n. s. in all cases). CONCLUSIONS:Insulin resistance and/or cardiovascular risk indicators were not associated with visfatin levels. Regulation of visfatin secretion occurs through biochemical pathways independent from those influenced by pioglitazone or simvastatin.
Authors: Marc-Andre Cornier; Dana Dabelea; Teri L Hernandez; Rachel C Lindstrom; Amy J Steig; Nicole R Stob; Rachael E Van Pelt; Hong Wang; Robert H Eckel Journal: Endocr Rev Date: 2008-10-29 Impact factor: 19.871
Authors: A Peti; A Juhasz; P Kenyeres; Z Varga; I Seres; G L Kovacs; G Paragh; L Bajnok Journal: J Endocrinol Invest Date: 2010-04-30 Impact factor: 4.256
Authors: R Aller; D A de Luis; O Izaola; M Gonzalez Sagrado; R Conde; M C Velasco; T Alvarez; D Pacheco; J M González Journal: Dig Dis Sci Date: 2008-11-14 Impact factor: 3.199
Authors: Kirsty C McGee; Alison L Harte; Nancy F da Silva; Nasser Al-Daghri; Steven J Creely; Christine M Kusminski; Gyanendra Tripathi; Paul L Levick; Manish Khanolkar; Marc Evans; Madhu V Chittari; Vinod Patel; Sudhesh Kumar; Philip G McTernan Journal: PLoS One Date: 2011-06-09 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Norbert Dahmen; Nina Manderscheid; Jana Helfrich; Petra B Musholt; Thomas Forst; Andreas Pfützner; Alice Engel Journal: PLoS One Date: 2008-08-20 Impact factor: 3.240