| Literature DB >> 25537454 |
Friedrich Mittermayer, Erica Caveney, Claudia De Oliveira, Loukas Gourgiotis, Mala Puri, Li-Jung Tai, J Rick Turner1.
Abstract
The global burden of type 2 diabetes is increasing worldwide, and successful treatment of this disease needs constant provision of new drugs. Twelve classes of antidiabetic drugs are currently available, and many new drugs are under clinical development. These include compounds with known mechanisms of action but unique properties, such as once-weekly DPP4 inhibitors or oral insulin. They also include drugs with new mechanisms of action, the focus of this review. Most of these compounds are in Phase 1 and 2, with only a small number having made it to Phase 3 at this time. The new drug classes described include PPAR agonists/modulators, glucokinase activators, glucagon receptor antagonists, anti-inflammatory compounds, G-protein coupled receptor agonists, gastrointestinal peptide agonists other than GLP-1, apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter (ASBT) inhibitors, SGLT1 and dual SGLT1/SGLT2 inhibitors, and 11beta- HSD1 inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25537454 PMCID: PMC4428473 DOI: 10.2174/1573399810666141224121927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diabetes Rev ISSN: 1573-3998
Marketed Drugs for T2D.
| Therapeutic Class-Compound | Mechanism of Action | Date first Compound of this Group Approved | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Increases insulin sensitivity, | 1957 (Europe), 1995 (FDA) | Gastrointestinal side effects, lactic acidosis, contraindications in renal insufficiency | |
| Stimulation of insulin secretion by the pancreas | Glibenclamide (Glyburide): 1969 (Europe), 1984 (FDA) | Hypoglycemia risk, weight gain | |
| Stimulation of insulin secretion by the pancreas | Repaglinide: 1998 (EMA), 1997 (FDA) | Short half life – pre-prandial administration; hypoglycemia risk, weight gain | |
| Reduction of insulin resistance by activation of the PPARγ receptor | Rosiglitazone: 1999 (FDA), 2000 (EMA) | Increased risk for heart failure events, fluid retention, weight gain, bone fractures. Cardiovascular risk concerns for rosiglitazone only. | |
| Reduction of glucose absorption in the gut | Acarbose: 1991 (Europe), 1995 (FDA) | Gastrointestinal side effects, no systemic effects. | |
| Stimulation of glucose dependent insulin release and suppression of elevated glucagon levels by prolonging the half-life of endogenous GLP-1 (minor effects on gastrointestinal motility and satiety) | Sitagliptin: 2006 (FDA), 2007 (EMA); (Vildagliptin only approved by EMA, 2008). Saxagliptin approved by FDA and EMA, 2009. linagliptin 2011 (FDA), alogliptin 2013 (FDA). | Concerns about risk for medullary thyroid cancer, pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer – not confirmed in clinical trials and by FDA and EMA [ | |
| Stimulation of glucose dependent insulin release, suppression of elevated glucagon levels, reduction of gastrointestinal motility, stimulating satiety, weight loss | Exenatide: 2005 (FDA), 2006 (EMA); Liraglutide 2010 (FDA), 2009 (EMA), Exenatide ER 2012 (FDA), (Lixisenatide only approved by EMA, 2013.) albiglutide 2014 (FDA and EMA). Dulaglutide, 2014 (FDA) | Only injectables, concerns about risk for medullary thyroid cancer, pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer – not confirmed in clinical trials and by FDA and EMA [ | |
| Reduction of the renal threshold for glucose excretion | Dapagliflozin: 2012 (EMA), 2014 (FDA). | Genital infections, possible diuretic effects, weight reduction | |
| Possibly activation of the farnesoid X receptor/bile acid receptor | Colesevelam: 2008 (FDA); no EMA approval for treatment of diabetes | Primary a lipid lowering drug with additional glucose lowering effects | |
| Central modification of insulin resistance | Bromocriptin: 2009 (FDA), no EMA approval for treatment of diabetes | Orthostatic hypotension, nausea | |
| Slowing of gastric emptying, suppression of elevated glucagon, stimulation of satiety | Pramlintide: 2005 (FDA), no EMA approval | Approved for type 1 and 2 diabetes, nausea, hypoglycemia when combined with other antidiabetic drugs ( | |
| Lowering of blood glucose | Regular insulin: 1982 (FDA); 1984 (Europe); Bovine insulin: 1922 | A new administration form of inhaled insulin has been recently approved (2014) (Afrezza®) for type 1 and 2 diabetes |
Additional Compounds with New Mechanisms of Action.
| Compound | Mechanism of Action | Phase of Development | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibition of DGAT-1 (enzyme responsible for final step in triglyceride synthesis) – weight loss, improved insulin sensitivity, decreased cholesterol and triglycerides [ | DS-7250 Phase 2 | Gastrointestinal side effects (nausea, diarrhea, vomiting) | |
| Protection of pancreatic beta cells, increase in insulin sensitivity [ | GWP42003 Phase 2 | Good tolerability in first clinical studies | |
| CPT1 is a mitochondrial enzyme involved in fatty acid metabolism. Inhibition decreases gluconeogenesis [ | Teglicar Phase 2 | Only limited data available | |
| Stimulation of the FGF21 receptor results in increased glucose uptake by adipocytes, reduction in glucagon, increased energy expenditure, weight loss, decrease in steatosis [ | LY2405319 Phase 1 | Only limited data available | |
| Liver specific glucocorticoid receptor antagonist; reduction of hepatic glucose production [ | ISIS-GCGRRx Phase 1 | Only limited data available | |
| Increases HSPs and nitric oxide – improved mitochondrial function and insulin sensitivity [ | BGP-15 Phase 2 | Only limited data available | |
| MC4R inactivating mutation causes monogenic obesity (hyperphagia). MC4R Agonists result in weight loss and improved glucose tolerance [120]. | RM-493 Phase 2 | Subcutaneous injection; initial indication is treatment of obesity caused by genetic deficiency in the MC4 pathway | |
| Decreases hepatic glucose production, increases muscle glucose uptake and improves pancreatic glucose dependent insulin secretion [121]. | Imiglimin Phase 2 | Placebo corrected HbA1c reduction as add on to metformin 0.44% in T2D patients [ | |
| PTP1B is linked to insulin resistance, obesity and T2D; inhibition could improve insulin sensitivity [123]. | TTP814 Phase 1/2 | ||
| SIRT1 is involved in glucose and lipid metabolism, insulin signaling and pancreatic insulin secretion; SIRT1 activation improves glucose homeostasis and insulin resistance [ | SRT3025 Phase 1 | Very early development stage | |
| The gut microbiome plays a role in the regulation of metabolic processes and changes of this microbiome have been associated with type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance [ | NM504 Phase 2 | NM504 improves glucose tolerance in individuals with prediabetes and untreated T2D [ |