| Literature DB >> 31664708 |
Abstract
Oral dapagliflozin (Edistride®, Forxiga®) is approved in the EU at a dosage of 5 mg/day as an adjunct to insulin in adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) and a body mass index (BMI) of ≥ 27 kg/m2, when insulin alone does not provide adequate glycaemic control despite optimal insulin therapy. As a highly selective SGLT2 inhibitor, dapagliflozin decreases plasma glucose levels independently of insulin action and enables glycaemic control improvement without increasing the risks associated with intensive insulin therapy. In the phase III DEPICT-1 and -2 trials, dapagliflozin 5 mg/day as an adjunct to insulin improved glycaemic control and reduced total daily insulin dose and bodyweight relative to placebo in adults with inadequately controlled T1D, including in patients with a BMI of ≥ 27 kg/m2, over 24 weeks of treatment. In extensions of these trials, these improvements were maintained up to 52 weeks. Dapagliflozin was generally well tolerated with a manageable safety profile and a hypoglycaemia profile generally similar to placebo. The incidence of diabetic ketoacidosis with dapagliflozin in patients with a BMI ≥ 27 kg/m2 was less than half that of the overall population who received dapagliflozin. Dapagliflozin is the first SGLT2 inhibitor to be approved for use in T1D and, while further clinical experience in T1D is required to more definitively establish its efficacy and safety profile, it provides a promising adjunctive treatment option for adults with T1D and a BMI of ≥ 27 kg/m2, when insulin alone does not provide adequate glycaemic control despite optimal insulin therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31664708 PMCID: PMC6881422 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-019-01213-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Overview of the pharmacological properties of dapagliflozin [11]
| Highly potent, selective and reversible inhibitor of SGLT2 (Ki = 0.55 nM); > 1400-fold more selective for SGLT2 than SGLT1 (the main transporter responsible for glucose absorption in the gut) |
| SGLT2 inhibition reduces renal glucose reabsorption and increases urinary glucose excretion, thereby reducing plasma glucose levels; level of glucose reabsorption is dependent on blood glucose concentration and glomerular filtration rate |
| Glucose excretion is observed after the first dose, is continuous over the 24-h dosing interval and is sustained over the course of treatment |
| Urinary glucose excretion induced by dapagliflozin is associated with bodyweight reduction |
| SGLT2 inhibitors may increase the risk of diabetic ketoacidosis, particularly in patients already at greater risk (e.g. those with a low β-cell function reserve, those receiving reduced insulin doses) |
| Similar pharmacokinetics in type 1 and 2 diabetes [ |
| Dose-linear pharmacokinetics over 0.1–500 mg; pharmacokinetics did not change after repeated daily dosing for 24 weeks |
| Rapid absorption; reached Cmax within 2 h after administration in the fasted state |
| Absolute oral bioavailability of 78% after a single 10 mg dose |
| Mean steady-state volume of distribution was 118 L; ≈ 91% bound to plasma proteins (protein binding unchanged by renal or hepatic impairment) |
| Extensively metabolized by UGT1A9 in the liver and kidney to form an inactive metabolite (dapagliflozin 3-O-glucuronide); CYP450-mediated metabolism was a minor clearance pathway |
| Mean plasma terminal half-life of 12.9 h after a single oral 10 mg dose |
| Dapagliflozin and its related metabolites are mainly eliminated via urinary excretion (< 2% unchanged dapagliflozin); 75 and 21% of a radiolabelled dose was recovered in urine and faeces (≈ 15% of the dose excreted in faeces as parent drug) |
| In interaction studies, dapagliflozin did not alter the pharmacokinetics of, and its pharmacokinetics were unaltered by, metformin, pioglitazone, sitagliptin, glimepiride, hydrochlorothiazide, bumetanide and valsartan. The pharmacokinetics of dapagliflozin were also unaltered by simvastatin. Dapagliflozin did not alter the pharmacokinetics of digoxin or warfarin (including its anticoagulatory effects) |
| Mefenamic acid increased systemic exposure to dapagliflozin by 55%; no clinically meaningful effect on 24 h urinary glucose excretion |
| Mean steady-state AUC was estimated to be ≈ 22% higher in females than males |
| No clinically relevant differences in systemic exposure among white, black or Asian races |
| In patients with severe hepatic impairment, the mean Cmax and AUC were 40% and 67% higher than matched healthy controls |
| Increased exposure due to age-related renal function can be expected; exposure data in patients aged > 70 years are lacking |
AUC area under the plasma concentration–time curve, C peak plasma concentration, SGLT sodium-glucose transporter
Efficacy of dapagliflozin 5 mg/day as an adjunct to insulin in adult patients with insufficiently controlled type 1 diabetes in phase III trials after 24 weeks of treatment. Data presented as means
| Treatment | HbA1c (%) | Total daily insulin dose (IU) | Bodyweight (kg) | Daily glucosea (mmol/L) | MAGEa (mmol/L) | % of daily glucose in target rangea,b | HbA1c ↓ ≥ 0.5% + no severe HG (% of pts)c | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (no. of pts) | Wk 24 [BL] | Change from BL vs PL | Wk 24 [BL] | Change from BL vs PLd | Wk 24 [BL] | Change from BL vs PLd | Wk 24 [BL] | Change from BL vs PL | Wk 24 [BL] | Change from BL vs PL | Wk 24 [BL] | Change from BL vs PL | |
DAPA (259) | 8.04 [8.52] | − 0.42*e | 56.1 [62.1] | − 8.80* | 79.4 [81.9] | − 2.96* | 9.9 [10.7] | − 0.9* | 8.5 [9.5] | − 1.0* | 52.3 [43.2] | + 9.11* | 50 |
PL (260) | 8.43 [8.50] | 62.1 [61.7] | 84.5 [84.4] | 10.7 [10.6] | 9.3 [9.4] | 43.8 [44.4] | 25 | ||||||
DAPA (271) | 8.09 [8.45] | − 0.37*e | 53.6 [59.1] | − 10.78* | 76.7 [79.2] | − 3.21* | 10.1 [10.7] | − 0.9* | 8.7 [9.4] | − 0.5* | 51.1 [43.5] | + 9.02* | 40 |
PL (272) | 8.43 [8.40] | 57.0 [56.5] | 79.2 [79.0] | 10.9 [10.6] | 9.2 [9.4] | 42.4 [43.5] | 20 | ||||||
| DAPAf | 7.98 [8.43] | − 0.43 | 64.7 [72.1] | − 10.24 | 88.5 [91.2] | − 2.89 | 9.8 [10.7] | − 0.9 | 8.3 [9.4] | − 1.0 | 53.7 [44.2] | + 9.69 | 47 |
| PLf | 8.38 [8.40] | 70.4 [70.9] | 93.2 [92.9] | 10.7 [10.6] | 9.1 [9.2] | 44.4 [44.7] | 21 | ||||||
The DEPICT-1 and -2 trials included a DAPA 10 mg/day group (non-approved dosage; not tabulated). In each trial, the primary and secondary endpoints reported in this table also favoured DAPA 10 mg/day vs PL (p < 0.0001)
BL baseline, BMI body mass index, DAPA dapagliflozin (5 mg/day), HbA glycated haemoglobin, HG hypoglycaemia, MAGE mean amplitude of glucose excursion, PL placebo, pts patients, Wk week, ↓ indicates reduced by
*p < 0.0001
aAs assessed with continuous glucose monitoring; p-values are nominal
bAssessed as mean % of glucose readings in DEPICT-1 and -2 and mean % of time in the pooled analysis; target range > 3.9 to ≤ 10.0 mmol/L
cOdds ratios for DAPA vs PL 3.09 (95% CI 2.10–4.56) in DEPICT-1 [14], 2.71 (95% CI 1.81–4.06) in DEPICT-2 [15] (both p < 0.0001); 3.52 (95% CI 2.39–5.21) in the pooled analysis [16]
dChange from BL vs PL assessed as % change in DEPICT-1 and -2 and as (PL-corrected) changes in IU and kg in pooled analysis
ePrimary endpoint
fNo. of pts not reported for efficacy analysis; statistical significance not assessed
| First oral treatment indicated for T1D in the EU |
| Approved as an adjunct to insulin in adults with T1D and a BMI ≥ 27 kg/m2 in whom insulin alone does not provide adequate glycaemic control |
| Reduces plasma glucose independently of insulin |
| Improves glycaemic control and reduces total daily insulin dose and bodyweight without increasing the risk of hypoglycaemia events |
| Generally well tolerated; manageable safety profile |
| Duplicates removed | 64 |
| Excluded during initial screening (e.g. press releases; news reports; not relevant drug/indication; preclinical study; reviews; case reports; not randomized trial) | 85 |
| Excluded during writing (e.g. reviews; duplicate data; small patient number; nonrandomized/phase I/II trials) | 55 |
| 16 | |
| 27 | |
| Search Strategy: EMBASE, MEDLINE and PubMed from 1946 to present. Clinical trial registries/databases and websites were also searched for relevant data. Key words were dapagliflozin, Farxiga, Forxiga, Type 1 diabetes mellitus. Records were limited to those in English language. Searches last updated 27 Sep 2019 | |