| Literature DB >> 29313285 |
Shaloo Gupta1, Hongwei Wang2, Neil Skolnik3, Liyue Tong4, Ryan M Liebert5, Lulu K Lee6, Peter Stella7, Anna Cali7, Ronald Preblick2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Usage patterns and effectiveness of a longer-acting formulation of insulin glargine at a strength of 300 units per milliliter (Gla-300) have not been studied in real-world clinical practice. This study evaluated differences in dosing and clinical outcomes before and after Gla-300 treatment initiation in patients with type 2 diabetes starting or switching to treatment with Gla-300 to assess whether the benefits observed in clinical trials translate into real-world settings.Entities:
Keywords: Basal insulin initiation; Basal insulin switching; Dose; Hemoglobin A1c; Hypoglycemia; Insulin glargine; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29313285 PMCID: PMC5778176 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-017-0651-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Patient baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | Insulin-naive patients | Insulin-experienced patients | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Started Gla-100 treatment ( | Started Gla-300 treatment ( | Switched to Gla-300 treatment ( | |
| Age (years)a | 54.4 (13.1) | 53.6 (11.9) | 56.3 (10.3) |
| Duration of diabetes (years)a | 11.1 (8.6) | 10.9 (9.5) | 13.3 (8.1) |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 56 (60.9%) | 156 (52.4%) | 96 (58.9%) |
| Female | 36 (39.1%) | 142 (47.7%) | 67 (41.1%) |
| Race/ethnicity | |||
| White | 56 (60.9%) | 192 (64.4%) | 108 (65.6%) |
| Black | 15 (16.3%) | 45 (15.1%) | 28 (17.2%) |
| Hispanic | 9 (9.8%) | 27 (9.1%) | 19 (11.7%) |
| Other | 11 (12.0%) | 27 (9.1%) | 8 (4.9%) |
| Unknown | 1 (1.1%) | 7 (2.4%) | 1 (0.6%) |
| BMI (kg/m2)a | 29.8 (4.6) | 30.2 (5.5) | 33.8 (6.7) |
| Charlson comorbidity indexa | 0.42 (0.76) | 0.40 (0.93) | 0.72 (1.17) |
| Number of patient visits for T2D in the 6 months before surveya | 2.25 (0.9) | 2.56 (1.5) | 2.40 (1.0) |
| Health insurance type | |||
| Commercial health insurance plan | 55 (59.8%) | 213 (71.5%) | 117 (71.8%) |
| Medicaid | 5 (5.4%) | 20 (6.7%) | 6 (3.7%) |
| Medicare | 28 (30.4%) | 57 (19.1%) | 42 (25.8%) |
| Health exchange | 2 (2.2%) | 5 (1.7%) | 3 (1.8%) |
| Other | 1 (1.1%) | 1 (0.3%) | 1 (0.6%) |
| None | 1 (1.1%) | 2 (0.7%) | 0 (0%) |
| Do not know | 3 (3.3%) | 11 (3.7%) | 3 (1.8%) |
| Previous concurrent treatment | |||
| Metformin | 64 (69.6%) | 229 (76.9%) | 96 (58.9%) |
| Sulfonylurea | 41 (44.6%) | 104 (34.9%) | 38 (23.3%) |
| Fixed-dose combination of sulfonylurea + metformin | 6 (6.5%) | 14 (4.7%) | 6 (3.7%) |
| DPP-4 inhibitor | 24 (26.1%) | 76 (25.5%) | 30 (18.4%) |
| Fixed-dose combination of DPP-4 inhibitor + metformin | 7 (7.6%) | 18 (6.0%) | 11 (6.8%) |
| SGLT2 inhibitor | 15 (16.3%) | 60 (20.1%) | 23 (14.1%) |
| Fixed-dose combination of SGLT2 inhibitor + metformin | 5 (5.4%) | 11 (3.7%) | 2 (1.2%) |
| Fixed-dose combination of SGLT2 inhibitor + DPP-4 inhibitor | 0 (0%) | 3 (1.0%) | 0 (0%) |
| GLP-1 receptor agonist | 19 (20.7%) | 60 (20.1%) | 28 (17.1%) |
| Another bolus or mealtime insulin | NA | NA | 47 (28.8%) |
| Previous basal insulin | |||
| Gla-100 | NA | NA | 118 (72.4%) |
| Insulin detemir | NA | NA | 45 (27.6%) |
BMI body mass index, DPP-4 dipeptidyl peptidase 4, Gla-100 insulin glargine at a strength of 100 units per milliliter, Gla-300 insulin glargine at a strength of 300 units per milliliter, GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1, NA not available, SGLT2 sodium glucose cotransporter 2, T2D type 2 diabetes
aThe mean is given, with the standard deviation in parentheses
Reasons provided by physicians for therapy choice
| Characteristic | Initiated Gla-100 treatment ( | Initiated Gla-300 treatment ( | Switched to Gla-300 treatment ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost considerations | 38 (41.3%) | 73 (24.5%) | 21 (12.9%) |
| Efficacy | 40 (43.5%) | 135 (45.3%) | 73 (44.8%) |
| Low rate of side effects | 21 (22.8%) | 47 (15.8%) | 34 (20.9%) |
| Guidelines dictated choice | 4 (4.4%) | 7 (2.4%) | 6 (3.7%) |
| Patient request | 7 (7.6%) | 34 (11.4%) | 17 (10.4%) |
| I was comfortable prescribing it/it was familiar to me | 37 (40.2%) | 79 (26.5%) | 54 (33.1%) |
| Hypoglycemia concerns | 12 (13.0%) | 58 (19.5%) | 44 (27.0%) |
| Comorbid conditions prevented me from prescribing something else | 2 (2.2%) | 10 (3.4%) | 1 (0.6%) |
| Contraindications prevented me from prescribing something else | 2 (2.2%) | 1 (0.34%) | 0 (0%) |
| Preferred dosing | 20 (21.7%) | 57 (19.1%) | 52 (31.9%) |
| Better control than other insulins | 15 (16.3%) | 67 (22.5%) | 54 (33.1%) |
| Better patient adherence | 13 (14.1%) | 61 (20.5%) | 67 (41.1%) |
| Other reason | 2 (2.2%) | 4 (1.3%) | 19 (11.7%) |
Gla-100 insulin glargine at a strength of 100 units per milliliter, Gla-300 insulin glargine at a strength of 300 units per milliliter
Fig. 1Daily titrated basal insulin dose (LS means) for insulin-naive patients starting treatment with insulin glargine at a strength of 100 units per milliliter (Gla-100) or insulin glargine at a strength of 300 units per milliliter (Gla-300)
Fig. 2Preswitch and postswitch daily basal insulin dose for patients switching to treatment with insulin glargine at a strength of 100 units per milliliter (Gla-100) or insulin glargine at a strength of 300 units per milliliter (Gla-300)
Fig. 3Hemoglobin A1c (A1C) level (a) and hypoglycemic events (b) for insulin-naive patients starting treatment with insulin glargine at a strength of 100 units per milliliter (Gla-100) or insulin glargine at a strength of 300 units per milliliter (Gla-300). In b the relative risk of hypoglycemic events after starting Gla-300 treatment versus Gla-100 treatment was 0.31 (95% confidence interval 0.12–0.81; P = 0.018). LS least squares
Fig. 4Hemoglobin A1c (A1C) level (a) and hypoglycemic events per year (b) for patients switching to treatment with insulin glargine at a strength of 300 units per milliliter (Gla-300) from treatment with another basal insulin. Asterisk regardless of prior basal insulin dosing frequency (once daily vs twice daily: P = 0.976), dagger 95% confidence interval − 1.13 to − 0.78 percentage points (P = 0.001), double dagger relative risk 0.17 (95% confidence interval 0.11–0.26)