The human experience with ghrelin administration

MC Garin, CM Burns, S Kaul… - The Journal of Clinical …, 2013 - academic.oup.com
MC Garin, CM Burns, S Kaul, AR Cappola
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2013academic.oup.com
Context: Ghrelin is an endogenous stimulator of GH and is implicated in a number of
physiological processes. Clinical trials have been performed in a variety of patient
populations, but there is no comprehensive review of the beneficial and adverse
consequences of ghrelin administration to humans. Evidence Acquisition: PubMed was
utilized, and the reference list of each article was screened. We included 121 published
articles in which ghrelin was administered to humans. Evidence Synthesis: Ghrelin has been …
Context
Ghrelin is an endogenous stimulator of GH and is implicated in a number of physiological processes. Clinical trials have been performed in a variety of patient populations, but there is no comprehensive review of the beneficial and adverse consequences of ghrelin administration to humans.
Evidence Acquisition
PubMed was utilized, and the reference list of each article was screened. We included 121 published articles in which ghrelin was administered to humans.
Evidence Synthesis
Ghrelin has been administered as an infusion or a bolus in a variety of doses to 1850 study participants, including healthy participants and patients with obesity, prior gastrectomy, cancer, pituitary disease, diabetes mellitus, eating disorders, and other conditions. There is strong evidence that ghrelin stimulates appetite and increases circulating GH, ACTH, cortisol, prolactin, and glucose across varied patient populations. There is a paucity of evidence regarding the effects of ghrelin on LH, FSH, TSH, insulin, lipolysis, body composition, cardiac function, pulmonary function, the vasculature, and sleep. Adverse effects occurred in 20% of participants, with a predominance of flushing and gastric rumbles and a mild degree of severity. The few serious adverse events occurred in patients with advanced illness and were not clearly attributable to ghrelin. Route of administration may affect the pattern of adverse effects.
Conclusions
Existing literature supports the short-term safety of ghrelin administration and its efficacy as an appetite stimulant in diverse patient populations. There is some evidence to suggest that ghrelin has wider ranging therapeutic effects, although these areas require further investigation.
Oxford University Press