| Literature DB >> 35017411 |
Carmen M Labandeira1, Arturo Fraga-Bau2, David Arias Ron3, Elena Alvarez-Rodriguez2, Pablo Vicente-Alba2, Javier Lago-Garma4, Ana I Rodriguez-Perez5.
Abstract
In the last decade, attention has become greater to the relationship between neurodegeneration and abnormal insulin signaling in the central nervous system, as insulin in the brain is implicated in neuronal survival, plasticity, oxidative stress and neuroinflammation. Diabetes mellitus and Parkinson's disease are both aging-associated diseases that are turning into epidemics worldwide. Diabetes mellitus and insulin resistance not only increase the possibility of developing Parkinson's disease but can also determine the prognosis and progression of Parkinsonian symptoms. Today, there are no available curative or disease modifying treatments for Parkinson's disease, but the role of insulin and antidiabetic medications in neurodegeneration opens a door to treatment repurposing to fight against Parkinson's disease, both in diabetic and nondiabetic Parkinsonian patients. Furthermore, it is essential to comprehend how a frequent and treatable disease such as diabetes can influence the progression of neurodegeneration in a challenging disease such as Parkinson's disease. Here, we review the present evidence on the connection between Parkinson's disease and diabetes and the consequential implications of the existing antidiabetic molecules in the severity and development of Parkinsonism, with a particular focus on glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; antidiabetic; diabetes mellitus; dopamine; exenatide; glucagon-like peptide-1; insulin; neurodegeneration; neuroinflammation; repurposing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35017411 PMCID: PMC8820685 DOI: 10.4103/1673-5374.332122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Regen Res ISSN: 1673-5374 Impact factor: 5.135
Summary of human clinical data involving the effects of anti-diabetic treatments in Parkinson’s disease
| Treatment | Reference | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Exenatide | Aviles-Olmos et al., 2013 | Single-blind, 12 mon, Exenatide trial in 45 PD patients |
| Significant benefit in motor (4.9 points difference, 95% CI: 0.3–9.4; | ||
| Aviles-Olmos et al., 2015 | Extended 24 mon follow-up of previous trial | |
| Confirmation of neuroprotective role of Exenatide in cognitive (5.3 points difference, 95% CI: 9.3–1.4; | ||
| Athauda et al., 2017 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, 48 wk treatment and 12 wk washout period | |
| Improvement with Exenatide of motor-symptoms (mean difference of –3.5 points, 95% CI: –6.7 to –0.3; | ||
| Athauda et al., 2018 | Non-motor and cognitive analysis of previous trial | |
| A 3.7 times (95% CI: 27.0–0.51; | ||
| Athauda et al., 2019a | Study of Akt pathway and brain insulin activity using biomarkers for neuronal-derived exosomes | |
| Higher IRS1 phosphorylation and Akt and mTOR expression were found in Exenatide group associated to better motor scores. | ||
| Athauda et al., 2019b | ||
| Better results of Exenatide were found in patients with tremor-dominant phenotype and lower MDS-UPDRS-2 scores, lower benefits were found in patients aged > 65 yr. | ||
| Wang et al., 2020 | Meta-analysis | |
| Exenatide improves motor and non-motor symptoms, also cognitive function and UPDRS IV scale. | ||
| Mulvaney et al., 2020 | Cochrane Meta-analysis | |
| Light benefit in motor symptoms (mean difference –3.10, 95% CI: –6.11 to –0.09) and uncertain results regarding non-motor and cognitive function | ||
| DDP4 inhibitors | Svenningsson et al., 2016 | Case-control study (Vildagliptin, Sitagliptin, Saxagliptin) |
| DPP4 inhibitors were related with low PD incidence (OR = 0.23, 95% CI: 0.07–0.74). | ||
| Brauer et al., 2020 | Longitudinal cohort study | |
| DDP4 inhibitors were associated with a risk reduction in PD incidence (IRR = 0.64; 95% CI: 0.43–0.88; | ||
| Jeong et al., 2021 | Retrospective study | |
| Improvement in motor symptoms and increased dopamine transporter availability in DDP4 group | ||
| Metformin | Ping et al., 2020 | Meta-analysis |
| Increased PD incidence (OR = 1.66; 95% CI: 1.14–2.42) | ||
| Thiazoledinediones | Hussain et al., 2020 | Meta-analysis |
| Decrease of PD incidence (HR = 0.81; 95% CI: 0.70–0.93), especially when > 5 yr (HR = 0.74; 95% CI: 0.62–0.88) | ||
| Pioglitazone | NINDS trial, 2015 | Prospective trial |
| No significant decline of PD incidence was observed. | ||
| Chang et al., 2020 | Retrospective study | |
| Reduction of PD incidence with pioglitazone increased when combined with statins. | ||
| Brauer et al., 2020 | Prospective cohort study | |
| No significant effects regarding PD incidence | ||
| Ongoing clinical trials | NCT04232969 | Exenatide-PD3 trial |
| Exenatide weekly during 2 yr in PD patients | ||
| NCT03456687 | Phase I, EudraCT 2019-000732-26 | |
| Exenatide weekly during a year in PD patients | ||
| NCT04154072 | Phase II trial | |
| NLY01 (Pegylated Exenatide) in early untreated PD patients | ||
| NCT04269642 | Phase IIa trial | |
| PT320 (extended release Exenatide formulation) in early PD patients. | ||
| NCT02953665 | Phase II, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial | |
| Liraglutide once daily during 14 mon, analysing non-motor symptoms and motor changes | ||
| NCT03659682 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | |
| Semaglutide during 2 yr, in early PD patients | ||
| NCT03439943 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group, phase II | |
| Lixisenatide during 12 mon in early PD patients |
Akt: Protein kinase B; CI: confidence Interval; DPP4: Dipeptidyl peptidase-4; HR: Hazard ratio; IRR: Incidence rate ratio; IRS-1: Insulin receptor substrate 1; MDS-UPDRS: Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale; mon: Months; mTOR: mammalian target of rapamycin; OR: odds ratio; PD: Parkinson´s Disease; wk: weeks; yr: years.