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Diabetes

In the last 3 weeks I’ve been told I’ve been diagnosed with diabetes and I’m now wondering if there’s any connection to some of the side effects of taking 800mg of Nilotinib. I was diagnosed with cml 8 years ago and have been mmr for at least 6 of those years, my knowledge of the diabetes situation is vague at the moment, but I’m wondering whether it wasn’t caused by any lifestyle reasons but just down to an over required dosage, that might control the cml but after 8 years might be weakening other organs!

Peter.

The only thing worse than to be placed on an extremely high TKI dosage is to be unnecessarily kept on that extremely high dosage for a prolonged period of time which increases the probability of serious side-effects.  I don't know the reasoning for you to be put on that high TKI dosage initially but it certainly seems that your TKI dosage should have been reduced a long time ago.  

Hi buzz m1,

 I was diagnosed with cml in January 2015, at the start I was on imatinib, in September 2015 was informed imatinib had failed, from that month to the present I’ve been on 800mg of Nilotinib, for years total mmr, I’ve never questioned the dosage amount, but this latest event, for me questions whether, if I’m well into mmr, and according to my medication side effects information, does my cml need 800 mg, and is it effecting the liver and kidney functioning, my diagnosis for diabetes came about after pains in the kidney area about 5 weeks ago, I had blood tests, and urine check, which confirmed diabetes , but have yet to meet anyone for a informative meeting how we approach this latest event in my health cv!

again many thanks for your reply!

peter

Hi scuba,

In December 2022,my pcr bcr-abl showed major molecular response ratio 0.001% this is my last reading, my next one is in the next few days, not sure if the diabetes will effect anything!

many thanks 

Peter.

Any PCR level below 0.01% is indistinguishable from "undetected". It is in the noise of the test. You are in a very good place.

You should discuss with your doctor lowering your dose or even stopping treatment and test response.

Regarding your diabetes (type 2). Diabetes is a metabolic disease with strong association with excess carbohydrate consumption. And there is evidence that nilotinib can be a partial cause (5.7% 2011 study).

Type 2 diabetes, however, can be managed and in some cases reversed naturally. Putting your body into ketosis (generate ketones for energy) helps improve insulin sensitivity and otherwise lower blood sugar levels. When few carbs are eaten (or none during fasting), the liver has to make sugar over time by metabolizing fat and protein. This process is conserved and helps lower excess blood sugar - and dramatically in some cases. As long as you are still able to produce insulin (not type 1 diabetes), regeneration and improved insulin response is possible.

Exercise, especially, high intensity large muscle group exercise helps clear the blood of excess sugar as well especially in the morning (which I don't do and should!).

Hi scuba,
Many thanks for a knowledgeable response, I’m encouraged with your response to my Cml progress, I’m hopefully speaking to my healthcare specialist in the next few days, and probably instead of accepting there views on what looks like a pretty good outlook with my Cml, but keeping me on probably an un-required dosage , i should, and will ask if only for a trial period a reduction in dosage, after nearly 8 years it would be interesting to see if I feel, mentally and physically the benefits

, as for the diabetes, I’m still wandering if the diabetes reading, could have been caused by a kidney infection, after 3-4 weeks of very careful eating, drinking, obviously a lot of water,I’ve never felt as well, again this is my medically unqualified thinking!

Hi alien 69,

Many thanks for the interesting information, in my comments I didn’t mention that during my telephone consultations with my consultant, on the last one in December, she mentioned my liver had been flagged up, wasn’t over concerned, but just wanted to let me know, I received a copy of the meeting, and again for the first time I noticed she’d commented on me being borderline diabetes, first time in 8 years this has ever been mentioned. 

Many thanks, Peter.

Pete I am sorry to hear this!! I believe Nilotinib long term can cause diabetes. I too am on it for 5 years and I am waiting for the day they tell me this too! But I have to ask please tell me you’ve not been on 800mg for 8 years!!! I am approaching MMR 4 if I hold that for a year I am going to ask for 300mg as apposed to my 600mg.

If it helps hindsight doesn’t help you. You’ll never know for sure, is it age, genetics, the fact you had too many take outs? Who knows a bit like getting CML I’d say. Hopefully you’ll be able to manange well but my first instinct is Nilotinib high dose for too long!

Al

Hi Alex,

Yes I can confirm I’ve been been on Nilotinib 800mg a day since September 2015, I had a 6 month spell on imatinib at the very start but was informed it had “failed”,to be honest I’ve always been a get in, get out, patient when it comes to my 3 months check up, as long as my results were going in the right direction I’ve never questioned the medication dosage amount, but in the last 3-4, 12 week consultations my specialist has mentioned my liver keeps “flagging” up some concern, and being asked if I’m consuming any alcohol? Which I’m not, and this is why I’m wondering about the long term side effects of Nilotinib, it’s obviously a life saver, but are any organs being effected by its efficiency. As for the diabetes diagnosis (type2) I intend to totally respect and follow all the advice I receive to the letter of the law!

Ps, to cap it all yesterday I received a call from my GP I’ve to have my gallbladder removed, another organ! Six weeks ago I was feeling fine, just shows how your health can turn so quickly!

Always great to hear from you Alex.

Oh Pete! If you’ve not suffered enough…. I like to be as honest as possible and although I cannot be certain as I am not doctor, but it do believe that the 800mg for so long hasn’t done you any favours other than keeping Leukaemia at bay, which in itself sounds hypocritical considering what that entails.

I remember when first being diagnosed and thinking to myself should I “beat” cml what price does it come with. And I believe as wonderful as TKIs are for the “majority” we are basically consuming a form of acid, and the fact that we cml’ers get so many symptoms, is testimony that the body doesn’t agree at all.

My opinion is such that once cml is under considerable control < MMR4 we can slowly reduce dose. The long term affects of TKI as you know are really unknown and in it’s infancy in the grand scheme.

But but but, although your news is unwelcome and it brings along its own problems, I believe you’ll carry on for many years and be with and love those who mean all to you. I too dread the day I get another diagnosis but I believe it’s u realistic taking a substance daily that would prob kill your dog in one sitting should they consume it.

Stay strong and always air your pain.
It’s the only way through!

Al

Hi Alex,

As you point out the cml is under control, as been for over 6 years, so why do I need to keep “strangling” it with such a high dosage, I’ve only raised this point once with my doctor and they came back with its not that high, even a single paracetamol has 500mg! So accepted this comparison, totally different drugs to compare in anyone’s view though, my concern about my diabetes diagnosis is it was after my December 2022 Cml phone consultation, it was in a written breakdown I received weeks later of the consultation and at the very end of the letter it said “borderline diabetes “ this has never been mentioned before, could I have, with lifestyle changes avoided this development, or does diabetes progress so quickly?

Again many thanks Alex for your supportive comments, take care.

Peter,

Type 2 diabetes is a metabolic condition. Drugs (including TKI's) can exacerbate the condition, but TKI's alone are unlikely to be the sole cause.

In simple terms, the liver and the pancreas get out of whack. The liver is often at the root of diabetes type 2. Fat in the liver prevents the liver from responding to insulin properly. This causes excess sugar to be produced and/or released by the liver into the blood. In addition, as we age, the ability of the pancreas to produce insulin can be an additional factor in that more insulin is needed to get the "liver's attention" to stop releasing sugar and the cells which produce insulin over time burn out. The liver takes extra sugar from the gut (eating sweets, processed carbs, etc.) and stores it in the liver. Once the sugar is stored to the max, extra sugar is turned into fat. This fat tends to store in the liver itself. Alcohol does the same thing - it is processed into fat and stored in the liver - first. As the body calls for more sugar, the liver releases the stored sugar before it releases fat. The solution to this problem is straight forward - stop eating sugar.

Steps can be taken to reverse the type 2 diabetic process. Clearing out the fat from the liver increases insulin sensitivity and improves sugar control. Fasting can certainly do that, but a diet low in carbohydrates will also cause the liver to make less fat in the first place. In addition, exercise - especially high intensity sweat producing exercise creates a sink for excess sugar to be burned and causes the liver to clear out its excess sugar and begin to metabolize fat. Working muscles love sugar and will burn it if available. But the key organ in all of this is mostly the liver. Once stored sugar is used up, the liver will start to metabolize the fat it has and make sugar (fat + protein = sugar). The body must have about 4 grams of sugar at all times. If you are not eating sugar, the liver will make it (gluconeogenesis). A sure way to know you are in this state is if ketones are present in your blood. Ketosis means you are burning fat for fuel. And this fat is coming from your liver first. This is a good thing. The liver put the fat there and the liver can get it out of there as well.

Having an ultrasound scan done of your liver will almost certainly show you if you have a 'fatty liver'. Getting fat out of the liver will go a long way to reversing type 2 diabetes for most people before it becomes irreversible.

It is very true that cutting calories (i.e. losing weight) helps the liver clear out its fat. Getting fat out of the liver helps it to pay attention to insulin and thereby regaining sugar control.

Hi scuba,

Absolutely brilliant, and helpful information as always from you, you’ve helped me tremendously and have given me a direction to which I must approach this latest “hurdle” in life, hopefully being a member of a gym, which I’ve been for a few years will keep this situation under control. Lastly I would like to thank Cml support for being a lifeline in always providing supportive members.

Many thanks Scuba.

Hi Pete,

Yeah I am not so sure I agree with your doctors analogy. 1 litre of water and 1 litre of whiskey will do two very different things. TKi and especially Nilotinib is highly toxic. (My months supply of tabs turns up covered in yellow labelled highly toxic tape, and I’ll never forget being passed my first supply of medication the nurse put 2 pairs of gloves on just to pass me the box and this was 2018 pre Covid era) Want I do know is that 800mg Nilotinib is considered “high dose” and is offered when resistance has occurred which in your case it did as you “failed” Imatinib. So you were defo on the right starting dose but 8 years on 800mg hasn’t done you any favours. Std dose in the uk is 600mg which I am on.

Aside from all that hindsight doesn’t help anyone, I would suggest seeing as your cml is well under control you reduce to 400mg and see how you go. I am on 600mg and feel like shit at times but it’s manageable but I am defo not my pre CML self.

You’re in a safe place so I’d recommend reducing dose and seeing how you hold the line. My bet is no change in your circumstances and maybe your other organs won’t have to work so hard. Nilotinib is one of the “worst” TKIs if you examine its toxicity profile. But it is a wonderful drug for treating CML and inducing a decent TFR outcome.

As scuba suggests maybe it’s unlikely to just be TKI but my hunch is that it is, as it’s reared it’s head quite quickly, maybe if we’re some other long term lifestyle decisions it might have shown it’s head more gradually? What do I know I just try to be as logical as possible….

All the best mate and let us know how you get on. I hope to reduce to 400mg from 600mg “if” I achieve and can hold MR4 (I am very close at 0.016) for a year.

Al

Hi Alex,

I’m now very concerned about the Nilotinib advised dosage, and side effects, on a lot of occasions my liver condition as been commented on in the 12 weeks phone call consultations, having now done my own medically, totally unqualified research I’ve discovered the 800mg dosage should have at least been reduced, if not stopped to enable the liver to recover from not being able to cope with the toxicity being caused by Nilotinib, I’d like to arrange at my hospital a total review of my Cml progress from January 2015 to the present. From day one I’ve always respected my body’s fight to keep the Cml under control, but I’m now wondering if I’m making it work harder than it needs to, bordering on near on abusing it.

Brilliant advice, as always from you Alex.
Many thanks.

Peter.