| Literature DB >> 25162967 |
Xiaotong Zhao1, Yongxiangi Li, Mingwei Chen, Yan Chen, Yao Dai, Youming Wang, Huijuan Xie.
Abstract
This research was carried out to evaluate the chemopreventive effects of different doses of metformin treatment for 6 months on rectal aberrant crypt foci (ACF) in patients with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT). A total of 120 Chinese patients with IGT were enrolled and assigned randomly to a low-dose metformin group (n=30, metformin at 250 mg/day), a middle-dose metformin group (n=30, metformin at 500 mg/day), a high-dose metformin group (n=30, metformin at 1500 mg/day), and a control (untreated with metformin) group (n=30). Each participant was followed for 6 months by protocol, and the number of ACF per patient in the above four groups was examined by magnifying colonoscopy before, and after 3 and 6 months of, treatment. The mean ACF numbers in both the middle-dose and the high-dose metformin groups were significantly decreased at 3 as well as 6 months of treatment, whereas they did not change in the low-dose metformin and the untreated groups. In the high-dose metformin group, BMI, waist circumference, fasting plasma glucose, homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance index, and 2-h plasma glucose were significantly decreased. However, no such change was observed in the middle-dose metformin group. Changes in the ACF number correlated positively with changes in the homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (r=0.273, P=0.013), BMI (r=0.241, P=0.042), and 2-h plasma glucose (r=0.252, P=0.037), respectively, in the high-dose metformin group, but no such correlation was observed in the middle-dose metformin group. Metformin suppressed ACF formation in IGT patients in a dose-dependent manner, possibly through direct and indirect (attenuating insulin resistance) mechanisms.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25162967 DOI: 10.1097/CEJ.0000000000000078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cancer Prev ISSN: 0959-8278 Impact factor: 2.497