Posted on 10/28/2020 9:37:45 AM PDT by Red Badger
The diabetes drug exenatide is currently being investigated as a Parkinson's treatment in Phase 3 human trials Esbenklinker/Depositphotos
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A large population-based cohort study, led by researchers from University College London, is suggesting some drugs used to treat diabetes may also prevent the onset of Parkinsons disease. Along with prior research, these new findings help validate an upcoming Phase 3 human clinical trial set to test one particular diabetes drug in Parkinsons patients.
Following several years of conflicting studies, a large and somewhat definitive 2018 study confirmed a link between type 2 diabetes and Parkinsons disease. Following several million subjects, the study found type 2 diabetics were 32 percent more likely to develop Parkinsons disease.
Alongside these findings, substantial preclinical and preliminary human research has been chronicling the effect of a drug called exenatide on Parkinsons disease symptoms. Most recently, a placebo-controlled study with a cohort of 60 Parkinsons patients suggested exenatide may slow the progression of degenerative motor symptoms.
This new study, published in the journal Brain, investigated medical records from over 100,000 people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. The cohort was broken down into different groups depending on what particular diabetes drug treatment they were administered.
The findings revealed notably lower rates of Parkinsons disease diagnoses in those diabetic subjects taking one of two classes of diabetes drug: GLP-1 agonists and DPP4 inhibitors. Exenatide is a GLP-1 agonist.
Co-lead author on the new study, Tom Foltynie, says these findings certainly help add weight to the link between type 2 diabetes and Parkinsons disease. He also points out the research offers clear signals a drug such as exenatide may actually alter the course of the disease, and not merely improve symptoms.
We have added to evidence that exenatide may help to prevent or treat Parkinsons disease, hopefully by affecting the course of the disease and not merely reducing symptoms, but we need to progress with our clinical trial before making any recommendations, says Foltynie.
Foltynie is leading the Phase 3 clinical trial set to explore the disease-modifying effect of exenatide on Parkinsons patients. The trial is currently recruiting 200 subjects who will either take exenatide or a placebo once weekly for two years.
Li Wei, co-lead author on the new study, suggests it is certainly too early for doctors to offer exenatide to Parkinsons patients. However, Wei does point out doctors should consider Parkinsons risk factors when determining diabetic treatments.
It may be helpful for doctors to consider other risk factors for Parkinsons disease when prescribing medications for type 2 diabetes, but further research will be needed to confirm clinical implications, says Wei.
The new study was published in the journal Brain.
Source: University College London
and the drugs cost will skyrocket
For later.
Yada, yada, yada.
Here’s hoping...but lots of mileage to go.
The method which lowered my H1C from pre-diabetic range down to normal range was free of additional costs. I began using the treadmill every day at the community gym where I already was paying HOA dues. Not only my H1C improved, my blood pressure also improved. And my energy level is off the charts for a 80 year old man.
Conclusion: Exercise is the best option to maintain good health. Now looking forward to reaching 100 without pain and without needing a wheel chair.
Awesome! Great to hear. :D
Congratulations on taking charge and renewing your health. Our bodies were created to work and move every day.
Peach
A true diabetes preventative would be truly a Godsent for millions of people. Diabetes is the source of many other deseases.
Using a treadmill is about the most boring thing a human can do as far as I am concerned. What techniques do you use to avoid the boredom?
You are exactly 100% right... treadmill is as boring as it gets. I have 200 of my most favorite songs & music stored on my smart phone as MP3 files and I play it using a free app called Musicolet and I can listen to it during treadmill via Bluetooth so it is wireless. The phone is parked on a window nearby. I can choose via Musioclet which playlist I want to listen, such as Mozart or Pop or select a certain group such as Beetles or Abba, or a combination of any MP3 files.
The benefits of keeping this discipline of doing one mile in 23 minutes at 2 deg up-slope are so huge for my 80 year old body, I will be stupid to quit. I have no balance issues, no leg joint pains or cramps, the heart is working flawless, and I swear I could join a ballet class if I wanted to. Never ever expected to feel this athletic at 80 when I retired at age 57 with hip joint pain, racing heart, fainting spells at work, panic attacks in closed malls. All those issues are gone!
Diabetes preventive is already available to everyone at no cost. Limit all calorie intake during ANY 9 hours in a 24 hour period. And walk 1 mile daily at brisk pace. I was diagnosed prediabetic in mid-50’s. Began walking on golf course gradually increasing to 5 rounds of 18/week. All health issues disappeared. At age 75 I quit the private golf course (unlimited rounds for fixed monthly fee) and now doing boring treadmill 6-7 times every week. Still feeling great at age 80.
Thanks for the reply! I will try music. I have been watching the TV.
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