| Literature DB >> 31776781 |
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Thiazolidinediones (TZDs) are the only pharmacologic agents that specifically treat insulin resistance. The beneficial effects of TZDs on the cardiovascular risk factors associated with insulin resistance have been well documented. TZD use has been limited because of concern about safety issues and side effects. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Bone fractures; CV outcomes; Heart failure; Insulin resistance; PPARγ agonists; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31776781 PMCID: PMC6881429 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-019-1270-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Fig. 1Insulin-resistant type 2 diabetes is the co-existence of two separate metabolic abnormalities: a primary beta-cell disease: diabetes mellitus and a lipid distribution abnormality which creates insulin resistance, the metabolic syndrome, and increased cardiovascular disease. These abnormalities can be separate or co-exist. These abnormalities can interact in susceptible populations leading to an increase in the prevalence of diabetes and an increase in atherosclerotic disease
Beneficial effects of thiazolidinediones in the treatment of patients with insulin resistance [3••, 18••, 20, 25–27, 30, 31•, 32•]
| 1. Improves insulin sensitivity in insulin-resistant individuals from 25 to 68% depending on the study and technique used (euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp, Bergman minimal model, Homeostasis Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR)) | |
2. Effects on adipose tissue a. Increase subcutaneous adipose tissue mass approximately 3.5% b. Little no effect on visceral adipose tissue mass | |
3. Effects on dyslipidemia a. Decreases plasma-free fatty acids 25 to 35% b. Increase in plasma HDL cholesterol 10 to 20% c. Plasma triglycerides reduced particularly if baseline value > 200 mg/dL d. Small dense LDL particles are converted to large buoyant LDL particles e. Increases adiponectin | |
| 4. Decrease in hepatic triglyceride concentration (hepatic steatosis) | |
5. Effects on endothelium a. Vasodilatation is increased b. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure decreased 4 to 5 mmHg c. Production of adhesion molecules (VCAM 1, ICAM 1) are decreased d. Vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation is inhibited e. Neointimal tissue proliferation after coronary stent implantation in type 2 diabetes is reduced 50–70% | |
6. Effects on inflammation a. Reduces mean plasma C-reactive protein (CRP) by 25–30% b. WBC counts and metalloproteinase are reduced | |
7. Effects on procoagulant state a. Reduces plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) approximately 25% b. Reduces plasma fibrinogen | |
8. Effect on glycemic control a. Thiazolidinedione reduction in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) results from decreases in both fasting and postprandial hyperglycemia b. The magnitude of decrease in HbA1c is a function of the magnitude of improvement in resistance and the extent of residual insulin secretion c. In large clinical trial such as PROactive, HbA1c was reduced − 0.8% from baseline 7.8% with 53% reduction in insulin dose d. The ADOPT study data showed that rosiglitazone had a significantly greater durability in controlling glycemia after 5 years of treatment of patients with type 2 diabetes than either metformin or glyburide | |
9. Effect in preserving beta-cell function a. In separate studies, rosiglitazone (DREAM) and pioglitazone (ACT NOW) decreased the progression of prediabetes to diabetes by 60% and 72%, respectively, after a median treatment of 3.0 and 2.4 years b. Decrease in progression from prediabetes to diabetes in both trials was most closely associated with preservation of beta-cell insulin secretory function |
Thiazolidinediones: edema reported in randomized controlled clinical trials (RCT) and a French PharmacoVigilance Database
| Study | Population | Drug | Number | Duration of trial | Edema | Edema without HF | Patients without edema developing HF | Edema before serious HF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PROactive [ | Type 2 DM with previous CV events or high CV risk | Pioglitazone | 2065 | Mean 34.5 months | 713 (27.4%) | 563 (21.6%) | 51/149 (34.2%) | |
| Placebo | 2663 | 419 (15.9%) | 341 (13.0%) | 26/108 (24.1%) | ||||
| RECORD [ | Type 2 DM | Rosiglitazone | 2220 | Mean 5.5 years | ||||
| Sulfonylurea/metformin | 2227 | |||||||
| DREAM [ | Patients with IFG and IGT | Rosiglitazone | 2365 | Median 3 years | 439 (4.8%) | |||
| Placebo | 2634 | 41(1.6%) | ||||||
| IRIS [ | Patients after ischemic stroke and with insulin resistance. No diabetes | Pioglitazone | 1923 | 5 years | 334/1579 (18%) Adjudicated 12.2% | 2.7% | 4.7% | |
| Placebo | 1928 | 228/1700 (12%) Adjudicated 11.0% | 2.8% | 5.7% | ||||
| APPROACH [ | Type 2 DM with known coronary atherosclerosis | Rosiglitazone | 333 | Median 18 months | 29/333 (9%) | |||
| Glipizide | 339 | 24/339 (7%) | ||||||
| GSK CV function study [ | Type 2 DM | Rosiglitazone | 104 | 1 year | 7 (6.7%) | |||
| Glyburide | 99 | 1 (1.0%) | ||||||
| Echocardiographic study (Wilding) [ | Type 2 DM NYHA class I or II heart failure | Rosiglitazone | 110 | 52 weeks | 28 (25.5%) | |||
| Control | 114 | 10 (8.8%) | ||||||
| ADOPT [ | Type 2 DM | Rosiglitazone | 1456 | Median 4 years | 205 (14.1%) | |||
| Glyburide | 1441 | 123 (8.5%) | ||||||
| Metformin | 1454 | 104 (7.2%) | ||||||
| French PharmacoVigilance | Type 2 DM | TZD | 161 | 2002–2006 | 29 (18%) | |||
| Non-TZD | 2134 | 128 (0.8%) | ||||||
Thiazolidinediones and development of heart failure: randomized, controlled clinical trials in participants with insulin-resistance and either free of diabetes, with prediabetes, or with type 2 diabetes
| Study | Population | Drug | Number | Duration of trial | HF occurrence | HF hospitalized | HF mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PROactive [ | Type 2 DM with previous CV events or high risk | Pioglitazone | 2065 | Mean 34.5 months | 306 (14.6%) | 149 (6%) | 25(1%) |
| Placebo | 2663 | 220 (8.3%) | 108 (4%) | 22 (1%) | |||
| 0.003 | 0.007 | 0.634 | |||||
| RECORD [ | Type 2 DM | Rosiglitazone | 2220 | Mean 5.5 years | 61(2.7%) | 57 (2.57%) | 4 first event 10 total |
| Sulfonylurea/metformin | 2227 | 29 (1.1%) | 29 (1.1%) | 0 first event 2 total | |||
| < 0.001 | Not provided | Not provided | |||||
| DREAM [ | Patients with impaired fasting glucose (IFG) and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) | Rosiglitazone | 2365 | Median 3 years | 14 (0.59%) | ||
| Placebo | 2634 | 2 (0.07%) | |||||
| < 0.01 | |||||||
| IRIS [ | Patients after ischemic stroke and with insulin resistance. No diabetes | Pioglitazone | 1923 | 5 years | 67 (3.5%) | 44 (2.3%) | 1 (0.0005%) |
| Placebo | 1928 | 66 (3.4%) | 36 (1.87%) | 2 (0.001%) | |||
| 0.89 | 0.35 | 0.51 | |||||
| APPROACH [ | Type 2 DM with known coronary atherosclerosis | Rosiglitazone | 333 | Median 18 months | 8 (2.4%) | ||
| Glipizide | 339 | 3 (0.9%) | |||||
| 0.14 | |||||||
| Echocardiographic study (Wilding) [ | Type 2 DM NYHA class I or II heart failure | Rosiglitazone | 110 | 52 weeks | 36 (32.7%)a | ||
| Control | 114 | 20 (17.5%)a | |||||
| 0.037 | |||||||
| ADOPT [ | Type 2 DM | Rosiglitazone | 1456 | Median 4 years | 9 (0.6%) | ||
| Glyburide | 1441 | 4 (0.3%) | 1 | ||||
| Metformin | 1454 | 8 (0.55%) | 1 | ||||
| Vs. met 0.26 | |||||||
| VA ambulatory [ | Ambulatory patients with diabetes mellitus and heart failure | Pioglitazone or rosiglitazone | 818 | 2 years | 134 (16.4%) | 168 (20.5%) | |
| No insulin sensitizers | 4700 | 741 (15.8%) | 1192 (25.4%) | ||||
| 0.97 | 0.80 |
aWorsening heart failure requiring increased medications