| Literature DB >> 30390228 |
Sanjay Kalra1, Leszek Czupryniak2, Gary Kilov3, Roberta Lamptey4, Ajay Kumar5, A G Unnikrishnan6, Aissa Boudiba7, Mohamed Abid8, Zhanay A Akanov9, Ali Latheef10, Mustafa Araz11, Ralph Audehm3, Silver Bahendeka12, Naby Balde13, Sandeep Chaudhary14, Chaicharn Deerochanawong15, Olufemi Fasanmade16, Hinde Iraqi17, Tint Swe Latt18, Jean Claude Mbanya19, Joel Rodriguez-Saldana20, Ko Seung Hyun21, Zafar A Latif22, Maxim Lushchyk23, Magdy Megallaa24, Mohammed Wali Naseri25, Nguyen Quang Bay26, Kaushik Ramaiya27, Hoosen Randeree28, Syed Abbas Raza29, Khalid Shaikh30, Dina Shrestha31, Eugene Sobngwi19, Noel Somasundaram32, Norlela Sukor33, Rima Tan34.
Abstract
Premixed insulins are an important tool for glycemic control in persons with diabetes. Equally important in diabetes care is the selection of the most appropriate insulin regimen for a particular individual at a specific time. Currently, the choice of insulin regimens for initiation or intensification of therapy is a subjective decision. In this article, we share insights, which will help in rational and objective selection of premixed formulations for initiation and intensification of insulin therapy. The glycemic status and its variations in a person help to identify the most appropriate insulin regimen and formulation for him or her. The evolution of objective glucometric indices has enabled better glycemic monitoring of individuals with diabetes. Management of diabetes has evolved from a 'glucocentric' approach to a 'patient-centered' approach; patient characteristics, needs, and preferences should be evaluated when considering premixed insulin for treatment of diabetes.Funding: Novo Nordisk, India.Entities:
Keywords: BIAsp; Coformulation; IDegAsp; Insulin initiation; Insulin intensification; LisproMix; Patient-centered; Premixed; Type 2 diabetes
Year: 2018 PMID: 30390228 PMCID: PMC6250631 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-018-0521-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther Impact factor: 2.945
Formulations of premixed insulin
| Type of premixed insulin | Low-mix formulations | Mid-mix formulations | High-mix formulations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premixed regular insulin-NPH | 30% insulin regular/70% insulin NPH | 50% insulin regular/50% insulin NPH | Biphasic human insulin 75 75% insulin regular/25% insulin NPH |
| Premixed insulin analogs | 30% insulin aspart/70% insulin aspart protamine 25% insulin lispro/75% insulin lispro protamine | 50% insulin lispro/50% insulin lispro protamine 50% insulin aspart/50% insulin aspart protamine | Biphasic human lispro 75 Biphasic human lispro 70 Biphasic human aspart 70 |
| Coformulation | 70% insulin degludec/30% insulin aspart |
NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn
Patient selection for premixed insulin
| Parameters | Comments |
|---|---|
Duration of diabetes Duration of uncontrolled hyperglycemia | Longer duration of diabetes and uncontrolled hyperglycemia requires both basal and prandial coverage with exogenous insulin |
| Symptoms of hyperglycemia | Persons with symptomatic diabetes (polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia, weight loss, frequent infection) require both basal and prandial coverage |
| Associated acute comorbidity | Examples: non-healing ulcers, refractory or recurrent infections, slow-healing infections, e.g., tuberculosis or slow-healing trauma, e.g., fractures, preoperative uncontrolled hyperglycemia |
| Lifestyle | Meal pattern (number of meals or snacks per day), relative quantity of meals, their composition (proportion of carbohydrates, glycemic index), and regularity |
| Drug therapy | Inadequacy of multiple drugs that target postprandial glycemia, e.g., sulfonylureas and alpha glucosidase inhibitors, suggests the need for prandial insulin coverage. Inadequacy of drugs that target both fasting and postprandial glycemia, e.g., DPP4i GLP1RA and SGLT2i, also suggests the need for both basal and prandial insulin. Inadequacy of basal insulin must be managed by addition of prandial insulin, separately or as part of a dual-action insulin. Inadequacy of once-daily premixed insulin suggests the need for twice-daily or more frequent insulin administration |
| Glycemic status | Patterns of glycemia, risk of hypoglycemia, and magnitude of glycemic variability Glucometric indices: postprandial glucose excursions (PPGE) and prandial fasting index (PFI) |
| Patient preference | Willingness/ability to handle Number of injections Number of delivery devices Frequency of monitoring |
APP A1c prandial product, PFI prandial fasting index, PPGE postprandial glucose excursions
Fig. 1Factors influencing glycemic status in individuals with diabetes
Glucometric indices and choice of insulin
| Indices | Prefer premixa | Prefer basala |
|---|---|---|
| PPGE = PPG − FPG | 40–74 mg/dl | < 40 mg/dl |
| 2.2–4.1 mmol/l | < 2.2 mmol/l | |
|
| 0.4–0.6 | < 0.4 |
| FPG/HbA1cb | ≤ 20 | ≥ 20 |
FPG fasting plasma glucose, PPG postprandial plasma glucose, PPGE postprandial glucose excursion, PFI prandial fasting index
aThe cutoff values are arbitrary and are based upon diagnostic values for prediabetes and diabetes. For derivation, refer to Kalra [32]
bUsing FPG (126 mg/dl) and currently accepted HbA1c (6.3%) levels
Type 2 diabetes: Exemplars for initiation/intensification with premixed insulin analogs
| Current therapy | Current medical status | Current glycemic status | Dietary pattern | Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monotherapy OAD | Symptoms of hyperglycemia/catabolism/asthenia Acute medical or surgical comorbidity requiring timely resolution of hyperglycemia | Inadequate fasting + postprandial control | Regular meals | Initiation with premixed insulin, preferably twice daily |
| OAD, dual or triple combination | Symptoms of hyperglycemia/catabolism/asthenia Acute medical or surgical comorbidity requiring timely resolution of hyperglycemia Asymptomatic persons | Inadequate fasting + postprandial control | One heavy meal | Initiation with premixed insulin once daily |
| Two heavy meals | Initiation with premixed insulin twice daily | |||
| Basal insulin + OADs | Symptoms of hyperglycemia/catabolism/asthenia Acute medical or surgical comorbidity requiring timely resolution of hyperglycemia Asymptomatic persons | High HbA1c inspite of adequate FPG control High PPG, unacceptable nocturnal hypoglycemia | One heavy meal | Intensification to premixed insulin once daily |
| Two heavy meals | Intensification to premixed insulin twice daily | |||
| Premixed insulin once daily + OADs | Symptoms of hyperglycemia/catabolism/asthenia Acute medical or surgical comorbidity requiring timely resolution of hyperglycemia Asymptomatic persons | High HbA1c inspite of adequate FPG control High PPG, unacceptable nocturnal hypoglycemia | Heavy meals | Intensification to premixed insulin twice daily |
| Premixed insulin twice daily + OADs | Symptoms of hyperglycemia/catabolism/asthenia Acute medical or surgical comorbidity requiring timely resolution of hyperglycemia Asymptomatic persons | High HbA1c despite adequate FPG control | Heavy meals | Intensification to high mix insulin |
| High PPG, unacceptable nocturnal hypoglycemia | Heteromix insulina | |||
| Post-lunch hyperglycemia | Three heavy meals | Intensification to premixed insulin thrice daily |
FPG fasting plasma glucose, OAD oral antidiabetic drugs, PPG postprandial glucose
aHetero-mix: One premix combination with the morning meal and a different premix combination with the evening meal. Example: biphasic insulin aspart high-mix (50/50) before breakfast and lunch along with biphasic insulin aspart (30:70) with dinner