| Literature DB >> 20694081 |
Louise Profit1, Paul Chrisp, Carole Nadin.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Type 2 diabetes is increasing in prevalence worldwide and is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, mainly due to the development of complications. Vildagliptin is an inhibitor of dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP-4), a new class of oral antidiabetic agents. AIMS: To evaluate the role of vildagliptin in the management of type 2 diabetes. EVIDENCE REVIEW: Clear evidence shows that vildagliptin improves glycemic control (measured by glycosylated hemoglobin and blood glucose levels) more than placebo in adults with type 2 diabetes, either as monotherapy or in combination with metformin. Vildagliptin is as effective as pioglitazone and rosiglitazone, and slightly less effective than metformin, although better tolerated. Further glycemic control is achieved when adding vildagliptin to metformin, pioglitazone, or glimepride. There is evidence that vildagliptin improves beta-cell function and insulin sensitivity. Vildagliptin does not appear to be associated with weight gain or with a higher risk of hypoglycemia than placebo or other commonly used oral antidiabetic agents. Economic evidence is currently lacking. PLACE IN THERAPY: Vildagliptin improves glycemic control with little if any weight gain or hypoglycemia in adult patients with type 2 diabetes when given alone or in combination with metformin, thiazolidinediones, or sulfonylureas. Since many diabetic patients require combination therapy, the complementary mechanism of action of vildagliptin and other commonly prescribed antidiabetic drugs represents an important new therapeutic option in diabetes management.Entities:
Keywords: LAF 237; dipeptidyl peptidase IV (dipeptidyl peptidase 4) inhibition; glycemic control; type 2 diabetes; vildagliptin
Year: 2008 PMID: 20694081 PMCID: PMC2899806 DOI: 10.3355/ce.2008.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Core Evid ISSN: 1555-1741
Evidence base included in the review
| Initial search | 69 | 19 |
| records excluded | 61 | 6 |
| records included | 8 | 13 |
| Additional papers identified | 0 | 0 |
| Search update | ||
| records excluded | 5 | 35 |
| records included | 8 | 12 |
| Publications not available on databases and supplied by manufacturer | 0 | 3 |
| Publications identified from additional sources | 4 | 0 |
| Level 1 clinical evidence (systematic review, meta analysis) | 1 | 0 |
| Level 2 clinical evidence (RCT) | 15 | 13 |
| Level ≥3 clinical evidence | ||
| trials other than RCT | 1 | 6 |
| case reports | ||
| Evidence from animal and | 3 | 9 |
| Economic evidence | 0 | 0 |
| Total records included | 20 | 28 |
Four were supplied but one was a duplicate of data presented in a full paper and was excluded. For definitions of levels of evidence, see Editorial Information inside back cover or on the Core Evidence website (http://www.coremedicalpublishing.com).
RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Fig.1Mechanism of action of current oral glucose-lowering drugs (reprinted from Stumvoll et al. 2005, with permission from Elsevier). DPP-lV, dipephidyl peptidase lV; GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1; NEFA, nonesterified fatty acid.
Overview of current therapies for the treatment of type 2 diabetes
| Biguanide (metformin) | Only agent associated with potential weight loss | GI adverse effects common − minimized by slow titration | Recommended as a first-line glucose-lowering therapy in patients whose blood glucose is inadequately controlled using lifestyle intervention alone |
| Insulin secretagogues (sulfonylureas) | Relatively inexpensive | Drug interactions | First-line therapy if the patient is not overweight or metformin is not tolerated or contraindicated |
| Fast-acting insulin secretagogues (meglitinides) | Rapid onset and shorter duration of action than SUs due to more physiologically appropriate control of postprandial glucose levels | Drug interactions | |
| Thiazolidinediones (glitazones/PPAR-gamma agonists) | Beneficial effects on cardiovascular risk determinants: cytokines, inflammatory markers, lipids, blood pressure, endothelial function | Weight gain | Offered as combination therapy if unable to take, or if HbA1c remains unsatisfactory with, metformin and insulin secretagogues as combination therapy |
| Alfa-glucosidase inhibitors | STOP-NIDDM trial demonstrated reduced risk of myocardial infarction with acarbose | GI adverse effects e.g. abdominal bloating and cramping | Acarbose considered as alternative when unable to use other oral drugs |
| Insulin | Ability to achieve tight glycemic control | Hypoglycemia | Offered when inadequate blood glucose control on optimized oral drugs |
ADA, American Diabetes Association; AHA, American Heart Association; GI, gastrointestinal; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin A1c; IGT, impaired glucose tolerance; NICE, National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence; NYHA, New York Heart Association; PPAR, peroxisome proliferators-activated receptor; STOP-NIDDM, noninsulin dependent diabetes mellitus; SU, sulfonylurea; T2D, type 2 diabetes.
Effects of vildagliptin on blood glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) in active-controlled comparative studies (all level 2 evidence)
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + P 30 mg qd (n=157) | Placebo + P 30 mg qd −1.4 | Placebo + P 30 mg qd 43% | Placebo + P 30 mg qd −1.9 | NR | |
| Placebo + V 100 mg qd (n=150) | Placebo + V 100 mg qd −1.1 ( | Placebo + V 100 mg qd 43% | Placebo + V 100 mg qd −1.3 ( | NR | ||
| V 50 mg qd + P 15 mg qd (n=139) | V 50 mg qd + P 15 mg qd −1.7 ( | V 50 mg qd + P 15 mg qd 54% | V 50 mg qd + P 15 mg qd −2.4 ( | V 50 mg qd + P 15 mg qd −3.8 ( | ||
| V 100 mg qd + P 30 mg qd (n=146) | V 100 mg qd + P 30 mg qd −1.9 ( | V 100 mg qd + P 30 mg qd 65% | V 100 mg qd + P 30 mg qd −2.8 ( | V 100 mg qd + P 30 mg qd −5.2 ( | ||
| ( | ||||||
| Double-blind RCT, 24 weeks | V 50 mg bid (n=459) | V 50 mg bid −1.1 | NR | V 50 mg bid −1.3 | NR | |
| R 8 mg qd (n=238) | R 8 mg qd −1.3 | NR | R 8 mg qd −2.3 ( | NR | ||
| Double-blind RCT, 52 weeks | V 50 mg bid (n=526) | V 50 mg bid −1.0 | V 50 mg bid 35% | V 50 mg bid −0.9 | NR | |
| M 1 g bid (n=254) | M 1 g bid −1.4 | M 1 g bid 45% | M 1 g bid −1.9 ( | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + P 45 mg qd (n=138) | Placebo + P 45 mg qd −0.3 | Placebo + P 45 mg qd 14.8% | Placebo + P 45 mg qd −0.5 | ||
| V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd (n=124) | V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd −0.8 ( | V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd 28.7% ( | V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd −0.8 | V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd −1.2 | ||
| V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd (n=136) | V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd −1.0 ( | V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd 36.4% ( | V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd −1.1 | V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd −1.9 ( | ||
Of patients with HbA1c ≥7.0% at baseline.
Value relative to placebo + P.
2h-postprandial plasma glucose.
bid, twice daily; M, metformin; NR, not reported; P, pioglitazone; qd, once daily; R, rosiglitazone; RCT, randomized controlled trial; V, vildagliptin.
Effects of vildagliptin on blood glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) in placebo-controlled studies (all level 2 evidence)
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + M ≥1.5 g (n=130) | Placebo + M ≥1.5 g +0.2 | Placebo + M ≥1.5 g 9.4% | NR | NR | |
| V 50 mg qd + M ≥1.5 g (n=143) | V 50 mg qd + M ≥1.5 g −0.5 ( | NR | NR | NR | ||
| V 100 mg qd + M ≥1.5 g (n=143) | V 100 mg qd + M ≥1.5 g −0.9 ( | V 100 mg qd + M ≥1.5 g 35.5% ( | NR | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo (n=94) | Placebo −0.3 | NR | Placebo −0.1 | NR | |
| V 50 mg qd (n=104) | V 50 mg qd −0.8 | NR | V 50 mg qd −1.0 | NR | ||
| V 50 mg bid (n=90) | V 50 mg bid −0.8 | NR | V 50 mg bid −0.8 | NR | ||
| V 100 mg qd (n=92) | V 100 mg qd −0.9 (all | NR | V 100 mg qd −0.8 | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + G 4 mg qd (n=144) | Placebo + G 4 mg qd 0 | NR | Greater decrease with V than with placebo at ( | NR | |
| V 50 mg qd or bid + G 4 mg qd (n=132) | V 50 mg qd or bid + G 4 mg qd −0.7 | NR | NR | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo (n=88) | Placebo 0 | Placebo 13.6% | Placebo +0.1 | NR | |
| V 50 mg bid (n=84) | V 50 mg qd −0.5 | V 50 mg qd 25% | V 50 mg qd −0.5 | NR | ||
| V 50 mg bid (n=79) | V 50 mg bid −0.7 ( | V 50 mg bid 30.4% ( | V 50 mg bid −1.2 ( | NR | ||
| V 100 mg bid (n=89) | V 100 mg qd −0.8 ( | V 100 mg qd 39.1% ( | V 100 mg qd −1.1 ( | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + I >30 U/day (n=149) | Placebo + I >30 U/day −0.2 | NR | Placebo + I >30 U/day −0.8 | NR | |
| V 50 mg bid + I >30 U/day (n=140) | V 50 mg bid + I >30 U/day −0.5 ( | NR | V 50 mg bid + I >30 U/day −0.2 | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=72) | Placebo +0.28 | NR | Placebo +0.13 | Placebo +0.2 | |
| V 10 mg bid (n=71) | V 10 mg bid −0.53 | NR | V 10 mg bid −0.62 | V 10 mg bid −3.5 | ||
| V 25 mg bid (n=72) | V 25 mg bid −0.67 | NR | V 25 mg bid −0.78 | V 25 mg bid −3.2 | ||
| V 50 mg bid (n=76) | V 50 mg bid −0.92 (all | NR | V 50 mg bid −1.37 (all | V 50 mg bid −3.4 | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=28) | Placebo −0.6 | Placebo NR | Placebo +0.23 | Placebo +0.2 | |
| V 25 mg bid (n=70) | V −0.6 ( | V 47% | V −0.9 ( | V −1.7 ( | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=58) | NR | Placebo 23% | Placebo −0.41 | Placebo −0.61 | |
| V 25 mg bid (n=51) | NR | V 25 mg bid 44% | V 25 mg bid −0.44 | V 25 mg bid −1.03 | ||
| V 25 mg qd (n=54) | NR | V 25 mg qd 28% | V 25 mg qd −0.30 | V 25 mg qd −1.50 | ||
| V 50 mg qd (n=53) | V 50 mg qd −0.56 ( | V 50 mg qd 40% | V 50 mg qd −0.97 | V 50 mg qd −2.00 ( | ||
| V 100 mg qd (n=63) | V 100 mg qd −0.53 ( | V 100 mg qd 46% | V 100 mg qd −0.95 | V 100 mg qd −1.50 | ||
| Other doses NSD vs placebo | All doses NSD vs placebo | All other doses NSD vs placebo | ||||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=51, of whom 29 completed extension) | At 12 weeks: V −0.6 Placebo 0.1 ( | Placebo 10.7% V 41.7% | Greater decrease with V than with placebo at 12 weeks ( | Greater decrease with V than with placebo at 12 weeks ( | |
| Optional extension for further 40 weeks | V 50 mg qd (n=56, of whom 42 completed extension) | In extension study: V +0.0128 per month | Greater decrease with V than with placebo at 52 weeks ( | Greater decrease with V than with placebo at 52 weeks ( | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=19) | Placebo −0.15 | NR | Placebo −0.4 | Placebo −0.4 | |
| V 100 mg qd (n=18) | V −0.53 ( | NR | V −1.1 ( | V −1.9 ( | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=20) | NR | NR | Placebo −0.3 | NR | |
| V 100 mg qd (n=20) | NR | NR | V −1.0 ( | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, single center RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=11) | NR | NR | Greater decrease with V than placebo ( | NR | |
| V 100 mg bid (n=9) | NR | NR | NR | NR | ||
Of patients with HbA1c ≥7.0% at baseline.
Placebo subtracted value.
Results presented graphically, not stated.
2 h-postprandial plasma glucose.
bid, twice daily; G, glimepiride; I, insulin; M, metformin; NR, not reported; NSD, not statistically significantly different; qd, once daily; RCT, randomized controlled trial; V, vildagliptin.
Effects of vildagliptin on plasma insulin, glucagon, and GLP-1 levels (all level 2 evidence).
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=58) | Placebo −30.1 | NR | NR | |
| V 25 mg bid (n=51) | V 25 mg bid +3.0 | ||||
| V 25 mg qd (n=54) | V 25 mg qd −48.2 | ||||
| V 50 mg qd (n=53) | V 50 mg qd +2.8 | ||||
| V 100 mg qd (n=63) | V 100 mg qd +19.7 ( | ||||
| All other doses NSD vs placebo | |||||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=51, of whom 29 completed extension) | NSD between groups at 12 weeks | NR | NR | |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=19) | Insulin response to meal ingestion NSD between groups | Significant reduction in V group ( | Significant increase in V group ( | |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=20) | Insulin response to meal ingestion NSD between groups | Placebo +2 | Placebo +0.9 | |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, single center RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=11) | NR | 3.5 h mean glucagon: lower with V than placebo but NSD | Greater increase with V than placebo in 13.5 h mean GLP-1 ( | |
bid, twice daily; NR, not reported; NSD, not statistically significantly different; qd, once daily; RCT, randomized controlled trial; V, vildagliptin.
Effects of vildagliptin on beta-cell function (all level 2 evidence)
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + P 30 mg qd (n=157) | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| Placebo + V 100 mg qd (n=150) | NR | NR | NR | NR | ||
| V 50 mg qd + P 15 mg qd (n=139) | NR | NR | V 50 mg qd + P 15 mg qd +8.0 ( | NR | ||
| V 100 mg qd + P 30 mg qd (n=146) | NR | NR | V 100 mg qd + P 30 mg qd +5.5 | NR | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + P 45 mg qd (n=138) | NR | NR | Placebo + P 45 mg qd +2 | NR | |
| V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd (n=124) | V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd +6 ( | |||||
| V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd (n=136) | NR | NR | V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd +7 ( | NR | ||
| Placebo-controlled RCT, 52 weeks | Placebo (n=150) | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| V 50 mg qd (n=156) | NR | NR | NR | V 50 mg qd +5 vs placebo ( | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=58) | Placebo −4.3 | NR | NR | NR | |
| V 25 mg bid (n=51) | V 25 mg bid +16.9 | NR | NR | NR | ||
| V 25 mg qd (n=54) | V 25 mg qd +2.9 | NR | NR | NR | ||
| V 50 mg qd (n=53) | V 50 mg qd +6.4 | NR | NR | NR | ||
| V 100 mg qd (n=63) | V 100 mg qd +22.5 ( | NR | NR | NR | ||
| All other doses NSD vs placebo | ||||||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=28) | NR | Significant increase with V vs placebo ( | NR | NR | |
| V 25 mg bid (n=72) | ||||||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=51, of whom 29 completed extension) | NR | Greater increase with V than placebo at 12 weeks ( | Greater with V than placebo at 12, 24, and 52 weeks ( | NR | |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, single center RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=11) | NR | NR | NR | Greater increase with V than placebo ( | |
| V 100 mg bid (n=9) | ||||||
Defined as: HOMA-B (homeostasis model of beta-cell function) = [20 x fasting insulin (mU/L)]/(fasting glucose [mmol/L] −3.5).
Data presented graphically.
bid, twice daily; NR, not reported; P, pioglitazone; qd, once daily; RCT, randomized controlled trial; V, vildagliptin.
Effects of vildagliptin on insulin sensitivity (level 2 evidence)
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=51, of whom 29 completed extension) | Greater with V than placebo at 24 and 52 weeks ( | Greater with V than placebo at 12, 24 ( | |
qd, once daily; RCT, randomized controlled trial; V, vildagliptin.
Effects of vildagliptin on body weight (all level 2 evidence)
| Double-blind RCT, 52 weeks | V 50 mg bid (n=526) | V 50 mg bid +0.3 | |
| M 1 g bid (n=254) | M 1 g bid −1.9 ( | ||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT, 24 weeks | Placebo + P 45 mg qd (n=138) | V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd +0.1 | |
| V 50 mg qd + P 45 mg qd (n=124) | V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd +1.3 ( | ||
| V 50 mg bid + P 45 mg qd (n=136) | |||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=58) | Placebo −0.73 | |
| V 25 mg bid (n=51) | V 25 mg bid +0.05 | ||
| V 25 mg qd (n=54) | V 25 mg qd −0.55 | ||
| V 50 mg qd (n=53) | V 50 mg qd +0.04 | ||
| V 100 mg qd (n=63) | V 100 mg qd −0.07 | ||
| All V doses NSD vs placebo | |||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 12 weeks | Placebo (n=51, of whom 29 completed extension) | At 12 weeks: | |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter RCT, 4 weeks | Placebo (n=19) | Placebo +0.12 | |
| V 100 mg qd (n=18) | V +0.21 | ||
| NSD vs placebo |
Change versus placebo + P.
bid, twice daily; M, metformin; NR, not reported; NSD, not statistically significantly different; P, pioglitazone; qd, once daily; RCT, randomized controlled trial; V, vildagliptin.
Core evidence place in therapy summary for vildagliptin 50 mg once or twice daily in adults with type 2 diabetes
| Reduction in glycylated hemoglobin | Clear | Vildagliptin improves glycemic control more than placebo; 50 mg bid less effective than metformin 1 g bid; comparable to pioglitazone and rosiglitazone |
| Reduction in fasting and postprandial plasma glucose | Clear | Greater reduction with vildagliptin than with placebo; more sustained effect than rosiglitazone |
| Glycemic control in combination with metformin, pioglitazone, or glimepride | Clear | Adding vildagliptin to metformin, thiazolidinediones, or sulfonylureas causes a further improvement in glycemic control |
| Increase in postprandial GLP-1 | Clear | Greater increase with vildagliptin than placebo |
| Effects on postprandial insulin | Substantial | Similar with vildagliptin and placebo. Implies improved insulin secretion and sensitivity, shown by no change in insulin with lower glucose |
| Improvement in beta-cell function | Clear | Greater improvement with vildagliptin than placebo |
| Improvement in insulin sensitivity | Substantial | Greater improvement with vildagliptin than placebo |
| Hypoglycemia | Clear | Similar frequency with vildagliptin and placebo, and with metformin or thiazolidinediones |
| Weight gain | Clear | Similar with vildagliptin and placebo; weight gain less than with thiazolidinediones, but greater than with metformin |
| Tolerability | Clear | Well tolerated with few adverse effects; nasopharyngitis, cough, and headache |
| Liver function | Limited | Unpublished data reveal similar elevations in liver enzymes compared with metformin, a thiazolidinedione, a sulfonylurea, or placebo. Liver function tests necessary before and during treatment with vildagliptin, and the drug should not be used in patients with liver impairment |
| Cost effectiveness | No evidence | Studies required to verify the impact of vildagliptin alone or in combination with other oral agents on costs of illness |
bid, twice daily; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide.