Exenatide - Mechanism of Action

Mechanism of Action

Exenatide is believed to facilitate glucose control in at least five ways:

  1. Exenatide augments pancreas response (i.e. increases insulin secretion) in response to eating meals; the result is the release of a higher, more appropriate amount of insulin that helps lower the rise in blood sugar from eating. Once blood sugar levels decrease closer to normal values, the pancreas response to produce insulin is reduced; however, other drugs (like injectable insulin) are effective at lowering blood sugar, but can "overshoot" their target and cause blood sugar to become too low, resulting in the dangerous condition of hypoglycemia.
  2. Exenatide also suppresses pancreatic release of glucagon in response to eating, which helps stop the liver from overproducing sugar when it is unneeded, which prevents hyperglycemia (high blood sugar levels).
  3. Exenatide helps slow down gastric emptying and thus decreases the rate at which meal-derived glucose appears in the bloodstream.
  4. Exenatide has a subtle yet prolonged effect to reduce appetite, promote satiety via hypothalamic receptors (different receptors than for amylin). Most people using exenatide slowly lose weight, and generally the greatest weight loss is achieved by people who are the most overweight at the beginning of exenatide therapy. Clinical trials have demonstrated the weight reducing effect continues at the same rate through 2.25 years of continued use. When separated into weight loss quartiles, the highest 25% experience substantial weight loss, and the lowest 25% experience no loss or small weight gain.
  5. Exenatide reduces liver fat content. Fat accumulation in the liver or nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is strongly related with several metabolic disorders, in particular low HDL cholesterol and high triglycerides, present in patients with type 2 diabetes. It became apparent that exenatide reduced liver fat in mice and more recently in man.

In an open-label, randomized, controlled trial of 551 patients, exenatide treatment for 26 weeks was associated with 2.3 kg weight loss; however, gastrointestinal symptoms were more common in the exenatide group, including nausea (57.1%), vomiting (17.4%) and diarrhea (8.5%). For most patients, the nausea is mild to moderate and goes away entirely after a few days or weeks. Medical professionals who work with exenatide have stated much of what is reported as nausea is actually a feeling of fullness. Exenatide is speculated to make most patients need to eat less, and until an adjustment is made to smaller portions, the result is the fullness feeling.

Advantages: While other treatment options share one or more of the first three characteristics, some diabetics specialists view exenatide as a significant improvement over other available diabetic medications, although most doctors do not use it as primary therapy at this time. Except for metformin and acarbose, all other available drugs for improving glucose control have been associated with weight gain.

Disadvantages: In addition to gastrointestinal adverse reactions, a relative disadvantage of exenatide is that it is administered by injection. The originally approved, and still available form of exenatide called Byetta is injected twice a day, while the form approved on 1/27/12 called Bydureon is injected once a week. If the weekly injection is taken one or two days later than scheduled, there is very little impact on the patient. See side effects section below.

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