| Literature DB >> 32323194 |
Takashi Kadowaki1,2, Masakazu Haneda3,4, Hiroshi Ito5, Kazuyo Sasaki6, Yuka Yamada7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Teneligliptin, a dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitor, was approved for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in Japan in 2012. However, clinical trials of teneligliptin involved limited numbers of elderly patients. Therefore, we investigated the safety and efficacy of teneligliptin in elderly patients with T2DM.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; Dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitor; Elderly patients; Post-marketing surveillance; Real-world; Teneligliptin; Type 2 diabetes mellitus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32323194 PMCID: PMC7467469 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01306-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Patient characteristics at baseline
| < 65 years old ( | ≥ 65 to < 75 years old ( | ≥ 75 years old ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||
| Male | 3141 (68.3%) | 1954 (58.0%) | 1344 (49.2%) |
| Female | 1455 (31.7%) | 1417 (42.0%) | 1385 (50.8%) |
| Age (years) | 53.9 ± 8.4 | 69.3 ± 2.9 | 80.2 ± 4.3 |
| Duration of T2DM (years) | 5.53 ± 5.84 ( | 8.35 ± 8.40 ( | 9.70 ± 9.51 ( |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 26.44 ± 4.76 ( | 24.52 ± 3.79 ( | 23.95 ± 3.84 ( |
| HbA1c (%) | 8.15 ± 1.75 ( | 7.57 ± 1.32 ( | 7.31 ± 1.14 ( |
| FBG (mg/dL) | 157.9 ± 57.6 ( | 147.6 ± 46.9 ( | 145.7 ± 48.1 ( |
| eGFR* (mL/min/1.73 m2) | 83.91 ± 23.11 ( | 71.31 ± 19.79 ( | 61.07 ± 20.02 ( |
| Diet therapy | 3586 (78.0%) | 2585 (76.7%) | 1968 (72.1%) |
| Exercise therapy | 2912 (63.4%) | 2032 (60.3%) | 1346 (49.3%) |
| Diabetic complications | |||
| Any | 1057 (23.0%) | 899 (26.7%) | 840 (30.8%) |
| Retinopathy | 449 (9.8%) | 370 (11.0%) | 256 (9.4%) |
| Neuropathy | 379 (8.2%) | 353 (10.5%) | 331 (12.1%) |
| Nephropathy | 722 (15.7%) | 642 (19.0%) | 636 (23.3%) |
| Other complications | |||
| Hypertension | 2477 (53.9%) | 2208 (65.5%) | 2020 (74.0%) |
| Dyslipidaemia | 3127 (68.0%) | 2211 (65.6%) | 1687 (61.8%) |
| Heart disease | 425 (9.2%) | 615 (18.2%) | 809 (29.6%) |
Values are n (%) of patients or mean ± standard deviation
T2DM type 2 diabetes mellitus, BMI body mass index, HbA1c glycosylated haemoglobin, FBG fasting blood glucose, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate
*Patients not on dialysis at baseline
Teneligliptin administration and concomitant therapies
| < 65 years ( | ≥ 65 to < 75 years ( | ≥ 75 years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of treatment (days) | 1096 (477–1096) 821.48 ± 391.63 ( | 1096 (625–1096) 855.34 ± 370.93 ( | 1096 (427–1096) 799.59 ± 391.81 ( |
| Daily dose (mg) | 20.50 ± 2.98 ( | 20.40 ± 2.79 ( | 20.34 ± 2.64 ( |
| Discontinuation/withdrawal for any reason | 1581 (34.4%) | 1059 (31.4%) | 1040 (38.1%) |
| Did not return to the hospital* | 601 (38.0%) | 318 (30.0%) | 289 (27.8%) |
| Transfer to another hospital* | 329 (20.8%) | 251 (23.7%) | 335 (32.2%) |
| Insufficient/ineffective response* | 315 (19.9%) | 175 (16.5%) | 114 (11.0%) |
| Cure/symptom improvement* | 122 (7.7%) | 81 (7.6%) | 67 (6.4%) |
| AE/ADR* | 78 (4.9%) | 109 (10.3%) | 121 (11.6%) |
| Other* | 176 (11.1%) | 155 (14.6%) | 150 (14.4%) |
| Not reported* | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.1%) |
| Concomitant antidiabetic agents | |||
| Monotherapy | 2076 (45.2%) | 1653 (49.0%) | 1397 (51.2%) |
| Sulfonylureas | 1126 (24.5%) | 868 (25.7%) | 691 (25.3%) |
| Biguanides | 1303 (28.4%) | 652 (19.3%) | 339 (12.4%) |
| α-GIs | 487 (10.6%) | 422 (12.5%) | 342 (12.5%) |
| Thiazolidines | 426 (9.3%) | 289 (8.6%) | 230 (8.4%) |
| Insulin | 353 (7.7%) | 272 (8.1%) | 196 (7.2%) |
| Glinides | 229 (5.0%) | 206 (6.1%) | 161 (5.9%) |
| SGLT2 inhibitors | 304 (6.6%) | 89 (2.6%) | 36 (1.3%) |
| Other concomitant therapies | |||
| Antihypertensive drugs | 1908 (41.5%) | 1806 (53.6%) | 1658 (60.8%) |
| Antidyslipidaemic drugs | 1844 (40.1%) | 1474 (43.7%) | 1118 (41.0%) |
Values are n (%) of patients, median (25th–75th percentile), or mean ± standard deviation
AE adverse event, ADR adverse drug reaction, α-GI α-glucosidase inhibitor, SGLT2 sodium–glucose cotransporter 2
*The denominator is the number of patients in each subgroup who discontinued the study for any reason
Incidence of adverse drug reactions of special interest and adverse events related to cardiovascular disorders and malignant tumours
| < 65 years ( | ≥ 65 to < 75 years ( | ≥ 75 years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| All ADRs | 154 (3.35%) | 149 (4.42%) | 109 (3.99%) |
| Serious ADRs | 30 (0.65%) | 41 (1.22%) | 46 (1.69%) |
| ADRs/AEs of special interest | |||
| Hypoglycaemia-related events | |||
| All ADRs | 11 (0.24%) | 19 (0.56%) | 8 (0.29%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.10 | 0.23 | 0.13 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 2.27 (1.08–4.77) | 1.25 (0.50–3.10) |
| Serious | 2 (0.04%) | 3 (0.09%) | 3 (0.11%) |
| Skin and subcutaneous disorder-related events | |||
| All ADRs | 15 (0.33%) | 15 (0.44%) | 14 (0.51%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.14 | 0.18 | 0.22 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 1.31 (0.64–2.69) | 1.60 (0.77–3.32) |
| Serious | 1 (0.02%) | 1 (0.03%) | 4 (0.15%) |
| Pemphigoid | 1 (0.02%) | 0 | 4 (0.15%) |
| Gastrointestinal disorder-related events | |||
| All ADRs | 25 (0.54%) | 32 (0.95%) | 16 (0.59%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.23 | 0.39 | 0.25 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 1.68 (1.00–2.84) | 1.10 (0.59–2.06) |
| Serious | 3 (0.07%) | 4 (0.12%) | 5 (0.18%) |
| Pancreatitis | 0 | 1 (0.03%) | 0 |
| Intestinal obstruction (ileus) | 0 | 2 (0.06%) | 2 (0.07%) |
| Hepatic impairment-related events | |||
| All ADRs | 25 (0.54%) | 13 (0.39%) | 9 (0.33%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.23 | 0.16 | 0.14 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 0.68 (0.35–1.33) | 0.62 (0.29–1.32) |
| Serious | 3 (0.07%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (0.04%) |
| Renal impairment-related events | |||
| All ADRs | 16 (0.35%) | 13 (0.39%) | 5 (0.18%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.15 | 0.16 | 0.08 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 1.07 (0.51–2.22) | 0.54 (0.20–1.46) |
| Serious | 4 (0.09%) | 1 (0.03%) | 2 (0.07%) |
| Cardiovascular events | |||
| All AEs | 14 (0.30%) | 29 (0.86%) | 42 (1.54%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.13 | 0.35 | 0.66 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 2.73 (1.44–5.17) | 5.16 (2.82–9.45) |
| All ADRs | 4 (0.09%) | 7 (0.21%) | 7 (0.26%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.04 | 0.08 | 0.11 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 2.30 (0.67–7.86) | 3.00 (0.88–10.26) |
| Serious AEs | 11 (0.24%) | 25 (0.74%) | 40 (1.47%) |
| Serious ADRs | 1 (0.02%) | 6 (0.18%) | 7 (0.26%) |
| Malignant tumours* | |||
| All AEs | 22 (0.48%) | 48 (1.42%) | 41 (1.50%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.20 | 0.58 | 0.65 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 2.88 (1.74–4.77) | 3.21 (1.91–5.39) |
| All ADRs | 8 (0.17%) | 9 (0.27%) | 10 (0.37%) |
| Per 100 patient-years | 0.07 | 0.11 | 0.16 |
| IRR (95% CI) | 1 | 1.48 (0.57–3.83) | 2.15 (0.85–5.44) |
| Pancreatic carcinoma, AE | 1 (0.02%) | 6 (0.18%) | 8 (0.29%) |
| Pancreatic carcinoma, ADR | 1 (0.02%) | 3 (0.09%) | 1 (0.04%) |
| Dizziness | |||
| All ADRs | 2 (0.04%) | 5 (0.15%) | 4 (0.15%) |
| Serious | 0 | 0 | 0 |
ADRs were defined as AEs for which a causal relationship with teneligliptin could not be excluded (i.e. causal or unknown)
Values are n (%) of patients, incidence rate per 100 patient-years, or incidence rate ratio (95% CI) versus the < 65-year-old subgroup
ADR adverse drug reaction, IRR incidence rate ratio, CI confidence interval, AE adverse event
*All tumours were classified as serious
Fig. 1Mean levels and LS mean changes in HbA1c over time in patients aged < 65, ≥ 65 to < 75, or ≥ 75 years. The graph shows mean ± standard deviation at each time-point. ***p < 0.001 vs baseline by paired t test. †LS mean ± standard error, adjusted for baseline HbA1c. HbA1c glycosylated haemoglobin, LS mean least squares mean
Fig. 2Mean levels and mean changes in FBG over time in patients aged < 65, ≥ 65 to < 75, or ≥ 75 years. The graph shows mean ± standard deviation at each time point. ***p < 0.001 vs baseline by paired t test. †Mean ± standard deviation. FBG fasting blood glucose
| The number of elderly patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is increasing worldwide and in Japan. |
| Teneligliptin is a dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitor that was approved for the treatment of T2DM in Japan in 2012. |
| Clinical trials are often limited in terms of their duration, number of patients, and the background characteristics of patients, notably elderly patients. |
| We examined the long-term, real-world safety and efficacy of teneligliptin in elderly patients (≥ 65 to < 75, and ≥ 75 years old) using data from a 3-year post-marketing surveillance of teneligliptin in Japan. |
| We found no additional safety or efficacy concerns among elderly patients beyond those already described in the package insert. The present results support the use of teneligliptin for the treatment of elderly patients with T2DM in real-world clinical practice. |