著者
Jun Tanimura Hiromi Nakagawa Takeo Tanaka Akihiro Kikuchi Sachie Osada Yoshiaki Tanaka Kumpei Tokuyama Toshinari Takamura
出版者
The Japan Endocrine Society
雑誌
Endocrine Journal (ISSN:09188959)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.66, no.7, pp.615-620, 2019 (Released:2019-07-28)
参考文献数
11
被引用文献数
9 11

The mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor everolimus is an antitumor agent known to cause hyperglycemia. However, the clinical course of everolimus-induced hyperglycemia, its pathophysiological basis, and the treatment strategy are not clear. In this case series report, we present the clinical course of everolimus-induced hyperglycemia in four patients. Hyperglycemia occurred 3–8 weeks after the administration of everolimus irrespective of the body mass index (range, 21.3–29.1 kg/m2) or pre-existing diabetes. Insulin or insulin secretagogues were required for glycemic control in most of the patients. Of note, the hyperglycemia was reversible in all patients, and none of the patients required anti-diabetic agents to achieve adequate glycemic control after cessation of everolimus therapy. To investigate the underlying mechanism of everolimus-induced hyperglycemia, we assessed insulin secretion and sensitivity by 75 g oral glucose tolerance test, arginine challenge test, and/or hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp study using stable isotope-labeled glucose tracer in two patients. Everolimus did not affect insulin sensitivity in the liver, skeletal muscle, or the adipose tissue. In contrast, everolimus impaired insulin secretion and thereby increased basal hepatic glucose production. These findings further our understanding of the role of mTOR in glucose homeostasis in humans and provide insights for treatment strategies against everolimus-induced hyperglycemia.

言及状況

外部データベース (DOI)

Twitter (15 users, 19 posts, 62 favorites)

The clinical course and potential underlying mechanisms of everolimus-induced hyperglycemia https://t.co/XN8J3cGXzY
@LammingLab In humans, A rare side effect of High Daily doses of rapamycin and everolimus is mild and reversible hyperglycemia. Its due to inhibition of mTORC1 (not mTORC2) thus decreaseing insulin production. The same as for prolonged fasting and keto diet https://t.co/HX6XnnXS1a
@KenDBerryMD How to decrease insulin levels? #Rapamycin and everolimus, anti-aging drugs, powerful tools to decrease #insulin. At high daily doses, everolimus can be so effective that may cause (in some patients) transient and reversible hyperglycemia https://t.co/HX6XnnXS1a
@KenDBerryMD #Rapamycin and everolimus, mTOR inhibitors and anti-aging drugs, decreases #insulin levels. This may lead to transient and reversible hyperglycemia after several weeks of treatment with high doses. It’s benevolent “side effect” if occurs https://t.co/HX6XnnXS1a

収集済み URL リスト