Colin Ides M, Szczepanski Lidia W, Gérard Anne-Catherine, Elosegi Jose-Antonio
Endocrino-Diabetology Research Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, Centre Hospitalier Régional Mons-Hainaut/Groupe Jolimont, Mons Belgium/Groupe Helora, Mons, Belgium.
Group of Animal Molecular and Cellular Biology, Louvain Institute of Biomolecular Science and Technology, Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium.
touchREV Endocrinol. 2023 May;19(1):16-24. doi: 10.17925/EE.2023.19.1.16. Epub 2023 May 23.
From an epidemiological and pathophysiological point of view, Alzheimer's disease (AD) and type 2 diabetes (T2DM) should be considered 'sister' diseases. T2DM significantly increases the risk of developing AD, and the mechanisms of neuronal degeneration themselves worsen peripheral glucose metabolism in multiple ways. The pathophysiological links between the two diseases, particularly cerebral insulin resistance, which causes neuronal degeneration, are so close that AD is sometimes referred to as 'type 3 diabetes'. Although the latest news on the therapeutic front for AD is encouraging, no treatment has been shown to halt disease progression permanently. At best, the treatments slow down the progression; at worst, they are inactive, or cause worrying side effects, preventing their use on a larger scale. Therefore, it appears logical that optimizing the metabolic milieu through preventive or curative measures can also slow down the cerebral degeneration that characterizes AD. Among the different classes of hypoglycaemic drugs, glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists, which are widely used in the treatment of T2DM, were shown to slow down, or even prevent, neuronal degeneration. Data from animal, preclinical, clinical phase II, cohort and large cardiovascular outcomes studies are encouraging. Of course, randomized clinical phase III studies, which are on-going, will be essential to verify this hypothesis. Thus, for once, there is hope for slowing down the neurodegenerative processes associated with diabetes, and that hope is the focus of this review.
从流行病学和病理生理学角度来看,阿尔茨海默病(AD)和2型糖尿病(T2DM)应被视为“姐妹”病。T2DM显著增加患AD的风险,而神经元变性机制本身又以多种方式使外周葡萄糖代谢恶化。这两种疾病之间的病理生理联系,尤其是导致神经元变性的脑胰岛素抵抗,非常紧密,以至于AD有时被称为“3型糖尿病”。尽管AD治疗方面的最新消息令人鼓舞,但尚无治疗方法能永久阻止疾病进展。充其量,这些治疗只能减缓进展;最糟糕的是,它们无效,或会引起令人担忧的副作用,从而无法大规模使用。因此,通过预防或治疗措施优化代谢环境也能减缓AD所特有的脑变性,这似乎是合乎逻辑的。在不同类别的降糖药物中,广泛用于治疗T2DM的胰高血糖素样肽1受体激动剂已被证明能减缓甚至预防神经元变性。来自动物、临床前、临床II期、队列和大型心血管结局研究的数据令人鼓舞。当然,正在进行的随机临床III期研究对于验证这一假设至关重要。因此,这一次,减缓与糖尿病相关的神经退行性过程有了希望,而这一希望正是本综述的重点。