Effect of Magnesium Supplements on Insulin Secretion After Kidney Transplantation: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether magnesium supplementation improves insulin secretion and glycemic control in hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients on tacrolimus.
Results Summary
Magnesium supplementation (mean daily dose 688±237 mg) did not significantly improve insulin secretion, fasting glucose, HbA1c, or insulin resistance. Persisting hypomagnesemia was associated with worse glucose tolerance and lower dietary magnesium intake.
Population
Hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients on tacrolimus, more than 4 months post-transplant.
Effective Dosage
Up to 3 times 450 mg magnesium oxide daily (mean 688±237 mg/day).
Duration
6 months
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
magnesium oxide supplementation | no change | first-phase insulin secretion (FPIR) | hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients on tacrolimus | no significant change | failed to lead to significant differences | #1 |
magnesium oxide supplementation | no change | fasting glucose | hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients on tacrolimus | no significant change | failed to lead to significant differences | #2 |
magnesium oxide supplementation | no change | HbA1c | hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients on tacrolimus | no significant change | failed to lead to significant differences | #3 |
magnesium oxide supplementation | no change | HOMA-IR | hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients on tacrolimus | no significant change | failed to lead to significant differences | #4 |
- | increase | insulin hypo-secretion | patients with persisting hypomagnesemia | - | associated with | #5 |
- | increase | glucose intolerance | patients with persisting hypomagnesemia | - | associated with | #6 |
- | decrease | dietary magnesium intake | patients with persisting hypomagnesemia | 142±56 mg | associated with | #7 |
BACKGROUND Hypomagnesemia is associated with a disturbed glucose metabolism. Insulin hypo-secretion predicts diabetes in the general population and in transplant recipients. We aimed to assess whether magnesium improves insulin secretion and glycemic control after transplantation in prevalent hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients. MATERIAL AND METHODS We conducted an open-label, randomized, parallel-group study. Eligible participants were adults more than 4 months after kidney transplantation on tacrolimus with persisting serum magnesium concentrations <1.8 mg/dL randomized to magnesium oxide supplementation up to a maximum of 3 times 450 mg daily (N=26) or no supplements (N=26). Insulin secretion was assessed by OGTT-derived, first-phase insulin secretion (FPIR). The primary endpoint was the mean difference in FPIR between baseline and 6 months after randomization. Secondary endpoints were differences in HbA1c and insulin resistance, measured by HOMA. Dietary magnesium was assessed by a food-frequency questionnaire. All analyses were done on an intention-to-treat basis. RESULTS Magnesium with a mean daily dose of 688±237mg in the treatment group failed to lead to significant differences between the 2 groups in FPIR, fasting glucose, HbA1c, or HOMA-IR. Persisting hypomagnesemia was very common and associated with more insulin hypo-secretion, glucose intolerance, and lower dietary magnesium intake (142±56 versus 202±90 mg; p=0.015) as compared to patients with a rise in serum magnesium over 6 months. CONCLUSIONS Magnesium supplementation does not improve insulin secretion in stable hypomagnesemic kidney transplant recipients on tacrolimus. Persisting hypomagnesemia is associated with impaired glucose tolerance, insulin hypo-secretion, and dietary factors.