| Literature DB >> 30900198 |
Dhiren Patel1, Curtis Triplitt2, Jennifer Trujillo3.
Abstract
A substantial proportion of patients with suboptimal control of their type 2 diabetes experience delays in treatment intensification. Additionally, patients often experience overuse of basal insulin, commonly referred to as "over-basalization," whereby basal insulin continues to be uptitrated in order to meet targets, when addition of a mealtime bolus insulin dose may be a more appropriate option. In order to overcome these challenges, there is a need to develop the capacity of allied healthcare professionals to provide appropriate support to these patients, such as during initiation or titration of basal insulin. Pharmacists play an integral role in healthcare delivery, with patients seeing their pharmacist, on average, seven times more often than their primary care physician. This places pharmacists in a unique position to provide diabetes education and care, which may help patients avoid clinical inertia. Nevertheless, the management of the disease with basal insulin is becoming increasingly complex, with growing numbers of treatment options (such as recent second-generation longer-acting basal insulin formulations) and frequently updated titration algorithms. The two most common titration schedules specify either increasing doses by a set amount every 2-3 days or a treat-to-target strategy. Neither schedule has been shown to be superior, and the decision to use one or the other should be based on a discussion between the clinician and patient after assessment of mental and physical acumen, comfort of both parties, and follow-up plans. This review article discusses basal insulin therapy options and titration algorithms from the unique perspective of the pharmacist in order to help ensure that optimal antidiabetes therapy is initiated, appropriately titrated, and maintained.Funding: Sanofi US, Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Basal insulin; Basal insulin overuse; Pharmacist; Titration algorithm; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30900198 PMCID: PMC6824379 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-019-00907-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Summary of basal insulin product characteristics
| Product | Onset (h) | Duration (h) | Dosage forms and strengths | Insulin units per vial/pen | Maximum single-injection dose for pen devices (U) | Median cost [ | Storage days at room temperature (in use) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insulin glargine 100 U/mL [ | 2–4 | 24 | 3 mL cartridges | 300 | 80 | 298 | 28 |
| 10 mL vials | 1000 | ||||||
| 3 mL prefilled pens | 300 | ||||||
| Follow-on insulin glargine 100 U/mL [ | NA | 24 | 3 mL prefilled pens | 300 | 80 | 253 | 28 |
| Insulin glargine 300 U/mL [ | 6 | 24 | 1.5 mL prefilled pens | 450/900 | 80/160 | 298 | 42 |
| Insulin degludec 100 or 200 U/mL [ | 1 | > 42 | 3 mL prefilled pens containing either 100 or 200 U/mL | 300/600b | 80/160b | 355 | 56 |
| Insulin detemir 100 U/mL [ | 0.8–2 [ | < 24 | 10 mL vials | 1000 | 80 | 323 | 42 |
| 3 mL prefilled pens | 300 |
NA not available
aMedian cost in the USA calculated as the average wholesale price per 1000 units of a specified dosage
bAt 200 U/mL
Key head-to-head studies of basal-insulin initiation in insulin-naive patients
| Study | Study details | Target | Titration algorithm | Titration frequency | Insulin starting dose | Insulin dose at EOS | HbA1c, % baseline | HbA1c, % at EOS | Hypoglycemia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Riddle 2003 [ | Gla-100 or NPH once daily for 24 weeks | ≤ 100 mg/dL | Dose adjustment based on mean of self-monitored FPG values from preceding 2 days: ≥ 180 mg/dL ↑ 8 U insulin; 140–180 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; 120–140 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 100–120 mg/dL ↑ 2 U | Weekly | 10 U | Gla-100 47.2 U; NPH 41.8 U | Gla-100 8.61; NPH 8.56 | Gla-100 6.96; NPH 6.97 | Gla-100 9.2/patient year; NPH 12.9/patient year |
LANMET Yki-Järvinen 2006 [ | Gla-100 or NPH once daily before bedtime for 36 weeks | 72–100 mg/dL | Dose adjustment based on mean pre-breakfast SMPG over 3 consecutive days: > 100 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; > 180 mg/dL ↑ 4 U | Not stated | 10 U for patients using metformin alone; 20 U if patients had used both sulfonylurea and metformin | Gla-100 68 U (0.69 U/kg); NPH 70 U (0.66 U/kg) | Gla-100 9.13; NPH 9.26 | Gla-100 7.14; NPH 7.16 | Gla-100 5.4/patient year; NPH 8.0/patient year |
| Hermansen 2006 [ | Insulin detemir or NPH twice daily for 24 weeks | ≤ 108 mg/dL (pre-breakfast and pre-dinner) | Dose adjustment based on average of 3 preceding SMPG levels on consecutive days: > 180 mg/dL ↑ 10 U (responders and non-responders); 163–180 mg/dL ↑ 6 U (responders) ↑ 8 U (non-responders); 145–162 mg/dL ↑ 4 U (responders) ↑ 6 U (non-responders); 127–144 mg/dL ↑ 2 U (responders) ↑ 4 U (non-responders); 109–126 mg/dL ↑ 2 U (responders and non-responders); if one pre-breakfast plasma glucose: 56–72 mg/dL ↓ 2; < 56 mg/dL ↓ 4 | At least weekly for 12 weeks and at least fortnightly thereafter | 10 U per injection | Detemir 36.1 U pre-breakfast and 29.5 U in the evening; NPH 25.3 U pre-breakfast and 19.7 U in the evening | Detemir 8.6; NPH 8.5 | Detemir 6.8; NPH 6.6 | Detemir 8.6/patient year; NPH 15.95/patient year |
| Rosenstock 2008 [ | Insulin detemir (once or twice daily) or Gla-100 (once daily) for 52 weeks | ≤ 108 mg/dL | Dose adjustments in 2-U steps in the evening according to average pre-breakfast SMPG and response to previous dose adjustment; morning dose adjustment according to average pre-dinner SMPG in some insulin detemir patients | Daily | 12 U | Detemir 0.78 U/kg (once daily 0.52 U/kg, twice daily 1.00 U/kg); Gla-100 0.44 U/kg | Detemir 8.64; Gla-100 8.62 | Detemir 7.16 (once daily 7.12, twice daily 7.06); Gla-100 7.12 | Detemir 5.8/patient year; Gla-100 6.2/patient year |
BEGIN ONCE LONG Zinman 2012 [ | IDeg 100 U or Gla-100 100 U once daily for 52 weeks Inadequately controlled with OADs | 70–88 mg/dL | Dose adjustment on the basis of the average of pre-breakfast SMPG values of 3 consecutive days preceding a visit (full details not given) | Not reported | 10 U | IDeg 0.59 U/kg; Gla-100 0.60 U/kg | 8.2 for both | IDeg 7.1; Gla-100 7.0 | IDeg 1.52/patient year; Gla-100 1.85/patient year |
BEGIN LOW VOLUME Gough 2013 [ | IDeg 200 U or Gla-100 100 U once daily for 26 weeks | < 90 mg/dL | Dose adjustment according to the average of 3 consecutive preceding pre-breakfast SMPG levels: < 56 mg/dL ↓ 4 U; 56–69 mg/dL ↓ 2 U; 70–89 mg/dL no change; 90–125 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; 126–143 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 144–161 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; ≥ 162 mg/dL ↑ 8 U | Weekly | 10 U | IDeg 0.53 U/kg; Gla-100 0.60 U/kg | IDeg 8.3; Gla-100 8.2 | Mean HbA1c decreased by 1.3% in both treatment groups | IDeg 1.22/patient year; Gla-100 1.42/patient year |
BEGIN FLEX Meneghini 2013 [ | IDeg 100 U once-daily in a pre-specified dosing schedule (8–40-h intervals between injections) or IDeg 100 U once-daily IDeg at the main evening meal or Gla-100 at the same time each day for 26 weeks Insulin-naive or -experienced | 70–90 mg/dL | Dose adjustment according to the average of 3 consecutive preceding pre-breakfast SMPG levels: < 56 mg/dL ↓ 4 U; 56–69 mg/dL ↓ 2 U; 70–89 mg/dL no change; 90–125 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; 126–143 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 144–161 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; ≥ 162 mg/dL ↑ 8 U | Weekly | 10 U in insulin-naive patients | 0.6 U/kg for all groups in insulin-experienced patients; 0.5 U/kg for all groups in insulin-naive patients | IDeg flexible dosing 8.5; IDeg fixed 8.4; Gla-100 8.4 | IDeg flexible dosing mean decrease by 1.28; IDeg fixed 1.07; Gla-100 1.26 | IDeg flexible dosing 3.6/patient year; IDeg fixed 3.6/patient year; Gla-100 3.5/patient year |
| Meneghini 2013 [ | Insulin detemir or Gla-100 for 26 weeks | ≤ 90 mg/dL | Dose adjustment based on mean of 3 consecutive pre-breakfast SMPG measurements: 92–144 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; for each 18 mg/dL above that range (but ≤ 180 mg/dL), ↑ 2 U, with a maximum of 8 U added if mean FPG was >180 mg/dL. No dose adjustment was made if mean FPG was > 71 to ≤ 90 mg/dL, with no value ≤ 71 mg/dL without an obvious explanation The dose was to be reduced by 2 U if ≥ 1 fasting SMPG readings were 56–71 mg/dL and by 4 U if < 56 mg/dL | Weekly | 10 U | Detemir 57 U (0.7 U/kg); Gla-100 51 U (0.61 U/kg) | Detemir 7.96; Gla-100 7.86 | Detemir 7.48; Gla-100 7.13 | Detemir 3.19/patient year; Gla-100 4.41/patient year |
| Onishi 2013 [ | IDeg or Gla-100 100 U once daily for 26 weeks | 70–90 mg/dL | Dose adjustment based on mean of 3 consecutive pre-breakfast SMPG measurements: < 56 mg/dL ↓ 4 U; 56–69 mg/dL ↓ 2 U; 70–89 mg/dL no change; 90–125 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; 126–143 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 144–161 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; ≥ 162 mg/dL ↑ 8 U | Weekly | 10 U | IDeg 19 U (0.28 U/kg); Gla-100 24 U (0.35 U/kg) | IDeg 8.4; Gla-100 8.5 | IDeg 7.2; Gla-100 7.1 | IDeg 3.0/patient year; Gla-100 3.7/patient year |
BEGIN EASY AM; BEGIN EASY PM Zinman 2013 [ | IDeg 200 U three times weekly, either before breakfast (AM) or with the evening meal (PM), or Gla-100 once daily | 70–90 mg/dL | Based on mean pre-breakfast SMPG (lowest value from prior 3 consecutive days) IDeg: < 56 mg/dL ↓ 8 U; 56–69 mg/dL ↓ 4 U; 70–89 mg/dL no change; 90–125 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 126– 143 mg/dL ↑ 8 U; 144–161 mg/dL ↑ 12 U; ≥ 162 mg/dL ↑ 16 U Gla-100: < 56 mg/dL ↓ 4U; 56–69 mg/dL ↓ 2 U; 70–89 mg/dL no change; 90–125 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; 126–143 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 144–161 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; ≥ 162 mg/dL ↑ 8 U | Weekly | IDeg 20 U; Gla-100 10 U | IDeg AM 50 U; Gla-100 62 U IDeg PM 51 U; Gla-100 56 U (mean calculated dose for IDeg vs actual dose for Gla-100) | IDeg AM 8.2; Gla-100 8.3 IDeg PM 8.3; Gla-100 8.3 | IDeg AM mean decrease of 0.93; Gla-100 1.28 IDeg PM mean decrease of 1.09; Gla-100 1.35 | (Confirmed) IDeg AM 1.3/patient year; Gla-100 1.2/patient year IDeg PM 1.6/patient year; Gla-100 1.0/patient year |
EDITION 3 Bolli 2015 [ | Gla-300 or Gla-100 once-daily for 6 months | 80–100 mg/dL | SMPG > 100 and < 140 mg/dL ↑ 3 U; SMPG ≥ 140 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; SMPG ≥ 60 and < 80 mg/dL ↓ 3 U; SMPG < 60 mg/dL or if severe or multiple symptomatic hypoglycemia events occurred ↓ ≥ 3 U at investigator’s discretion | Weekly | 0.2 U/kg/day | Gla-300 0.62 U/kg; Gla-100 0.53 U/kg | Gla-300 8.49; Gla-100 8.58 | Gla-300 7.08; Gla-100 7.05 | ≥ 1 confirmed (≤ 3.9 mmol/L) or severe hypoglycemia event: Gla-300 46%; Gla-100 53% |
EOS end of study, FPG fasting plasma glucose, Gla-100 insulin glargine 100 U/mL, Gla-300 insulin glargine 300 U/mL, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c, IDeg insulin degludec, Gla-100 insulin glargine, NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn insulin, SMPG self-monitored plasma glucose
Titration trials of insulin initiation in insulin-naive patients
| Study | Treatment | Titration goal | Titration algorithm | Titration frequency | Insulin starting dose | Insulin dose at EOS | HbA1c, % baseline | HbA1c, % EOS | Hypoglycemia (overall confirmed events) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AT.LANTUS Davies 2005 [ | Gla-100 once daily for 24 weeks. Suboptimally controlled on insulin or OADs | ≤ 100 mg/dL | Based on mean of self-monitored FPG values from preceding 3 consecutive days Algorithm 1: ≥ 180 mg/dL ↑ 6–8 U insulin; 140–180 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 120–140 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; ≥ 100–120 mg/dL ↑ 0–2 U Algorithm 2: ≥ 180 mg/dL ↑ 2 U insulin; 140–180 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; 120–140 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; ≥ 100–120 mg/dL ↑ 0–2 U | Algorithm 1: titration weekly; managed by physician Algorithm 2: titration every 3 days; managed by patient | Various depending on prior treatment | Reported in figure only | Algorithm 1 8.9; algorithm 2 8.9 | Algorithm 1 7.9; algorithm 2 7.7 | Algorithm 1 29.8%; algorithm 2 33.3% |
GOAL A1C Kennedy 2006 [ | Gla-100 once daily for 24 weeks | 70–100 mg/dL | Algorithm 1: usual titration of Gla-100 and laboratory HbA1c testing; algorithm 2: usual titration and POC HbA1c testing; algorithm 3: active titration and laboratory HbA1c testing; algorithm 4: active titration and POC HbA1c testing “Usual titration” defined as patient instruction at study visits every 6 weeks only (patient managed) “Active titration” defined as additional weekly patient contact (telephone, email, or fax) to reinforce insulin titration Based on mean fasting SMPG: insulin was increased by SMPG ≥ 100 to < 120 mg/dL ↑ 0–2 U; ≥ 120 to < 140 mg/dL ↑ 2; 140 to < 160 mg/dL ↑ 4; ≥ 160 to < 180 mg/dL ↑ 6; ≥ 180 mg/dL ↑ 8. If < 70 mg/dL ↓ previous lower dose. If severe hypoglycemia (e.g., SMPG < 36 mg/dL) occurred, upward titration was stopped for 1 week. If the HbA1c was > 8.0% after visit 1, Gla-100 dose could be increased, at the investigator’s discretion, by up to 5 additional units to meet glycemic targets at each subsequent study visit | Weekly | 10 U | Usual titration groups 50 U; active titration groups 55–56 U | Usual titration groups 8.9; active titration groups 8.8–8.9 | Usual titration groups 7.6; active titration groups 7.3 | Usual titration groups 3.7/patient year; active titration groups 6.0/patient year |
PREDICTIVE 303 Meneghini 2007 [ | Insulin detemir for 26 weeks | ≤ 100 mg/dL | Algorithm 1 (patient-adjusted): Based on average of 3 fasting SMPG < 80 mg/dL, ↓ 3 U; 80–110 mg/dL, no change; > 110 mg/dL ↑ 3 U Algorithm 2 (physician adjusted): according to standard of care (variable) | Algorithm 1: every 3 days; algorithm 2: according to standard of care (variable) | On day 1: Algorithm 1 0.32 U/kg; algorithm 2 0.34 U/kg | Algorithm 1 0.68 U/kg; algorithm 2 0.53 U/kg | Algorithm 1 8.5; algorithm 2 8.5 | Algorithm 1 7.9; algorithm 2 8.0 | Algorithm 1 6.44/patient year; algorithm 2 4.95/patient year |
TITRATE Blonde 2009 [ | Insulin detemir once daily for 2 weeks | 70–90 or 80–110 mg/dL (3.9–5.0 or 4.4–6.1 mmol/L) | Using 3.9–5.0 mmol/L target: < 3.9 mmol/L ↓ 3 U; 3.9–5.0 mmol/L no adjustment; > 5.0 mmol/L ↑ 3 U Using 4.4–6.1 mmol/L target: < 4.4 mmol/L ↓ 3 U; 4.4–6.1 mmol/L no adjustment; > 6.1 mmol/L ↑ 3 U | Every 3 days | 0.1–0.2 U/kg or 10 U | 3.9–5.0 mmol/L treatment group 0.57 U/kg; 4.4–6.1 mmol/L group 0.51 U/kg | 3.9–5.0 mmol/L treatment group 7.99; 4.4–6.1 mmol/L group 7.94 | 3.9–5.0 mmol/L treatment group 6.77; 4.4–6.1 mmol/L group 7.00 | 3.9–5.0 mmol/L treatment group 7.73/patient year; 4.4–6.1 mmol/L group 5.27/patient year |
BEGIN: Once Philis-Tsimikas 2013 [ | Simple use IDeg 100 U for 26 weeks | “Simple” algorithm: 4-U dose adjustments based on a single pre-breakfast SMPG measurement; < 56 mg/dL ↓ 4 U; > 91 mg/dL ↑ 4 U). “Stepwise” algorithm: 2-U adjustments based on the lowest of 3 consecutive pre-breakfast SMPG readings (< 56 mg/dL ↓ 4 U; 56–70 mg/dL ↓ 2 U; 91–126 mg/dL ↑ 2 U; 127–144 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 145–162 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; > 162 mg/dL ↑ 8 U | Weekly | 10 U | “Simple” 62 U (0.61 U/kg); “Stepwise” 48 U (0.50 U/kg) | “Simple” 8.1; “Stepwise” 8.2 | “Simple” 7.0; “Stepwise” 7.2 | “Simple” 1.60/patient year; “Stepwise” 1.17/patient year | |
| Dailey 2014 [ | Gla-100 once daily for 24 weeks (pooled analysis of patient-level data from RCTs) | ≤ 100 mg/dL, with some studies also specifying a target FPG ≥ 72 mg/dL | Algorithm 1: ↑ 1 U once daily, if FPG > target; algorithm 2: ↑ 2 U every 3 days, if FPG > target; algorithm 3: treat-to-target, weekly titration based on 2-day mean FPG levels: ≥ 180 mg/dL ↑ 8 U; 140–180 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; 120–140 mg/dL ↑ 4 U; 100–120 mg/dL ↑ 2 U Dose decreases (2–4 U/day) were allowed if severe hypoglycemia (requiring assistance) or plasma glucose < 56 mg/dL at any time in the preceding week | Once daily; once every 3 days; once weekly | 10 U | Algorithm 1 0.42 U/kg; algorithm 2 0.56 U/kg; algorithm 3 0.42 U/kg | Algorithm 1 8.61; algorithm 2 8.79; algorithm 3 8.84 | Algorithm 1 7.11; algorithm 2 7.02; algorithm 3 7.05 | Algorithm 1 4.03/year; algorithm 2 1.58/year; algorithm 3 6.5/year |
LANCELOT Home 2015 [ | Gla-100 or NPH for 36 weeks | 80–100 mg/dL (4.4–5.5 mmol/L) for both fasting and nocturnal levels | Titration based on both pre-breakfast FPG levels (median previous 3 measures) and last nocturnal SMPG level Nocturnal and/or fasting ≤ 4.4 mmol/L or symptomatic hypoglycemia ↓ 2 U; nocturnal > 4.4 to ≤ 5.5 mmol/L and fasting > 4.4 mmol/L no change; fasting > 4.4 to ≤ 5.5 mmol/L and nocturnal > 4.4 mmol/L no change; nocturnal and fasting > 5.5 to ≤ 7.8 mmol/L ↑ 2 U; fasting > 5.5 to ≤ 7.8 mmol/L and nocturnal > 7.8 mmol/L ↑ 2 U; nocturnal > 5.5 to ≤ 7.8 mmol/L and fasting > 7.8 mmol/L ↑ 2 U; nocturnal and fasting > 7.8 mmol/L ↑ 4 U. In the event of severe hypoglycemia or HbA1c ≤ 6.0%, no insulin dose increase was allowed for the remainder of the study | Weekly during weeks 1–4, twice weekly during weeks 5–12, weekly up to week 36 | 0.2 U/kg | Gla-100 32.4 U (0.39 U/kg); NPH 30.7 U (0.36 U/kg) | 8.2 for both | Gla-100 7.1; NPH 7.2 | Gla-100 1.74 patient year; NPH 2.21 patient year |
| Yale 2016 [ | Gla-300 titrated using the EDITION or INSIGHT protocols | 80–100 mg/dL | EDITION: SMPG > 100 and < 140 mg/dL ↑ 3 U; SMPG ≥ 140 mg/dL ↑ 6 U; SMPG ≥ 60 and < 80 mg/dL ↓ 3 U; SMPG < 60 mg/dL or if severe or multiple symptomatic hypoglycemia events occurred ↓ ≥ 3 U at investigator’s discretion INSIGHT: 1 U/day until in target range | EDITION: weekly INSIGHT: daily | EDITION: 70.0 U INSIGHT: 67.0 U | EDITION: 8.4 INSIGHT 8.4 | EDITION: 7.6 INSIGHT: 7.6 | EDITION: 48.1% INSIGHT: 55.6% |
EOS end of study, FPG fasting plasma glucose, Gla-100 insulin glargine 100 U/mL, Gla-300 insulin glargine 300 U/mL, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c, IDeg insulin degludec, Gla-100 insulin glargine, NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn insulin, OAD oral antidiabetes drug, POC point of care, RCT randomized controlled trial, SMPG self-monitored plasma glucose
aInsulin-naive: EDITION 32.7%, INSIGHT 37.0%
Comparison of guideline recommendations for initiation and titration of basal insulin in T2D
| Guideline | ADA [ | AACE/ACE [ | IDF [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial dose | 10 U or 0.1–0.2 U/kg/daya | HbA1c < 8%: 0.1–0.2 U/kg/day HbA1c > 8%: 0.2–0.3 U/kg/day | Not specified |
| Titration | |||
| Target FPG | 4.4–7.2 mmol/L (80–130 mg/dL), but individualize to patient/disease featuresb | < 6.1 mmol/L (< 110 mg/dL) | < 6.5 mmol/L (< 115 mg/dL) |
| Target HbA1c | Usually < 7%, but individualize to patient/disease featuresb | < 7% for most patientsc | Generally < 7% |
| Dose change | Add 10–15% or 2–4 U | Fixed regimen: 2 U Adjustable regimen: FPG > 180 mg/dL: add 20% of TDD FPG 140–180 mg/dL: add 10% of TDD FPG 110–139 mg/dL: add 1 U | Add 2 U |
| Frequency | Once- to twice-weekly | Every 2–3 days | Every 3 days |
| Hypoglycemia | Reduce dose by 4 U or 10–20% of TDD | Reduce TDD by: BG < 70 mg/dL: 10–20% BG < 40 mg/dL: 20–40% | Not specified |
| Escalate to combination injectables | Consider when FPG is ≥ 300 mg/dL (≥ 16.7 mmol/L) or HbA1c ≥ 10% | When targets are not achieved | Not specified |
AACE/ACE American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists/American College of Endocrinology, ADA American Diabetes Association, BG blood glucose, FPG fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c, IDF International Diabetes Federation, T2D type 2 diabetes, TDD total daily dose
aDepending on the degree of hyperglycemia
bGoals should be individualized on the basis of duration of diabetes, age/life expectancy, comorbid conditions, known cardiovascular disease or advanced microvascular complications, hypoglycemia unawareness, and individual patient considerations
cAACE/ACE guidelines state that HbA1c levels of ≤ 6.5% are optimal if they can be achieved in a safe and affordable manner, but patients using insulin are considered to not be achieving glycemic control and are therefore advised to intensify therapy if HbA1c ≥ 7%