| Literature DB >> 29574634 |
Abstract
As the number of people living with type 2 diabetes (T2D) continues to rise, managing their complex needs presents an increasing challenge to physicians. While treatment guidelines provide evidence-based guidance, they are not prescriptive-rather they emphasize individualization of management based on a patient's clinical needs and preferences. Physicians, therefore, need to be fully aware of the advantages and disadvantages of the multiple and increasing treatment options available to them at each stage of the disease. The progressive nature of T2D means that treatment with basal insulin will become inevitable for many patients, while for some patients basal insulin alone will eventually be insufficient for maintaining glycemic targets. Recent guidelines recommend two basic approaches for intensifying basal insulin: the use of rapid-acting insulin, either as additional prandial injections or as part of premix (biphasic) insulin; and the addition of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) to the insulin therapy, which can be administered via subcutaneous injection once or twice daily, or weekly depending on formulation. More recently, two fixed-ratio combinations of basal insulin and a GLP-1 RA that allow for once-daily dosing have been approved. Each of these approaches has potential benefits and drawbacks, particularly in terms of risk for hypoglycemia, weight change, convenience, and side effects. Understanding these differences is central to guiding patient and physician choice. This article discusses the rationale, advantages, disadvantages, and implementation of currently available strategies for basal insulin treatment intensification in patients with T2D. FUNDING: Sanofi US, Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Basal insulin; Diabetes type 2; Fixed-ratio combinations; Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist; Treatment intensification
Year: 2018 PMID: 29574634 PMCID: PMC5984906 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-018-0395-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther Impact factor: 2.945
Fig. 1Combination injectable therapy for type 2 diabetes. A1C Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), FBG fasting blood glucose, GLP-1 RA glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, hypo hypoglycemia, SMBG self-monitoring of blood glucose.
(Adapted with permission from American Diabetes Association 2017 guidelines. Reproduced with permission from Inzucchi et al. [57])
Advantages and disadvantages of prandial insulin and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist regimens for insulin intensification
| Guideline-recommended options | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Prandial insulin | ||
| Basal-plus | Dosing/titration flexibility greater than basal-bolus or premixed Gradual introduction to multiple daily injections | Risk of hypoglycemia Weight gain Progresses to multiple daily injections |
| Basal-bolus | Dosing/titration flexibility greater than premixed | Multiple daily injections immediately Risk of hypoglycemia Weight gain |
| Premixed | Simplified regimen vs. basal-plus of basal-bolus | Less flexibility than basal plus or basal bolus Less effective glycemic control vs. basal-plus of basal-bolus Greater risk of hypoglycemia and weight gain |
| GLP-1 RAs | ||
| Added to basal insulin | Weight neutral/weight loss Lower incidence of hypoglycemia vs. addition of RAI | Once/twice daily or once weekly (depending on GLP-1 RA) injection in addition to basal insulin Gastrointestinal side effects |
| Fixed-ratio combination | Simple, once-daily regimen Decreased post-prandial glucose excursions without increased risk of hypoglycemia Reduced gastrointestinal side effects vs. GLP-1 RA alone Reduced weight gain vs. basal insulin | Gastrointestinal side effects |
GLP-1 RA glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, RAI rapid-acting insulin
Randomized trials of fixed-ratio insulin/glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist combinations
| Randomized trials | Study population | HbA1c change from baseline (%) | Patients achieving target HbA1c (< 7.0% (56 mmol/mol) (%) | Change in body weight from baseline (kg) | Hypoglycemiaa | GI adverse events of nausea/vomiting (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients affected (%) | Events/patient-year | ||||||
| iGlarLixi studies | |||||||
| LixiLan-O [ | Insulin-naive; metformin ± 2nd OAD | iGlarLixi: − 1.6 Gla-100: − 1.3 Lixi: − 0.9 | iGlarLixi: 74 Gla-100: 59 Lixi: 33 | iGlarLixi: − 0.3 Gla-100: + 1.1 Lixi: − 2.3 | iGlarLixi: 25.6 Gla-100: 23.6 Lixi: 6.4 | iGlarLixi: 1.4 Gla-100: 1.2 Lixi: 0.3 | iGlarLixi: 9.6/3.2 Gla-100: 3.6/1.5 Lixi: 24.0/6.4 |
| LixiLan-L [ | Basal insulin ± ≤ 2 OADs | iGlarLixi: − 1.1 Gla-100: − 0.6 | iGlarLixi: 55 Gla-100: 30 | iGlarLixi: − 0.7 Gla-100: + 0.7 | iGlarLixi: 40.0 Gla-100: 42.5 | iGlarLixi: 3.0 Gla-100: 4.2 | iGlarLixi:10.4/3.6 Gla-100: 0.5/0.5 |
| IDegLira studies | |||||||
| DUAL-I [ | Insulin-naive; Metformin ± pioglitazone | IDegLira: − 1.9 IDeg: − 1.4 Lira: − 1.3 | IDegLira: 81 IDeg: 65 Lira: 60 | IDegLira: − 0.5 IDeg: + 1.6 Lira: − 3.0 | IDegLira: 32.0 IDeg: 39.0 Lira: 7.0 | IDegLira: 1.8 IDeg: 2.6 Lira: 0.2 | IDegLira: 9.0/4.0 IDeg: 4.0/1 Lira: 20.0/8 |
| DUAL-II [ | Basal insulin + metformin ± other OAD | IDegLira: − 1.9 IDeg: − 0.9 | IDegLira: 60 IDeg: 23 | IDegLira: − 2.7 IDeg: 0.0 | IDegLira: 24.0 IDeg: 25.0 | IDegLira: 1.5 IDeg: 2.6 | IDegLira: 6.5/nr IDeg: 3.5/nr |
| DUAL-III [ | Previous GLP-1 RA + metformin ± other OAD | IDegLira: − 1.3 GLP-1b: − 0.3 | IDegLira: 75 GLP-1b: 36 | IDegLira: + 2.0 GLP-1b: − 0.8 | IDegLira: 32.0 GLP-1b: 2.8 | IDegLira: 2.8 GLP-1b: 0.1 | IDegLira: 3.1/nr GLP-1b: 4.1/nr |
| DUAL-IV [ | Insulin-naive; sulphoylurea ± metformin | IDegLira: − 1.45 Placebo: − 0.46 | IDegLira: 79 Placebo: 29 | IDegLira: + 0.5 Placebo: − 1.0 | IDegLira: 41.7 Placebo: 17.1 | IDegLira: 3.5 Placebo: 1.4 | IDegLira: 4.5/2.4 Placebo: 3.4/2.7 |
| DUAL-V [ | Gla-100 + metformin | IDegLira: − 1.8 Gla-100: − 1.1 | IDegLira: 72 Gla-100: 47 | IDegLira: − 1.4 Gla-100: + 1.8 | IDegLira: 28.4 Gla-100: 49.1 | IDegLira: 2.2 Gla-100: 5.1 | IDegLira: 9.4/nr Gla-100: 1.1/nr |
GI Gastrointestinal, Gla-100 insulin glargine 100 U, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c, IDeg insulin degludec, Lira liraglutide, Lixi lixisenatide, nr not reported, OAD oral antidiabetes drug
aDUAL studies: confirmed or severe hypoglycemia (< 56 mg/dL); LixiLan studies: documented symptomatic hypoglycemia (≤ 70 mg/dL)
bUnchanged from previous therapy