| Literature DB >> 33559704 |
Geert Jan Biessels1, Chloë Verhagen2, Jolien Janssen2, Esther van den Berg2,3, Gudrun Wallenstein4, Bernard Zinman5, Mark A Espeland6, Odd Erik Johansen7.
Abstract
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Type 2 diabetes, particularly with concomitant CVD, is associated with an increased risk of cognitive impairment. We assessed the effect on accelerated cognitive decline (ACD) of the DPP-4 inhibitor linagliptin vs the sulfonylurea glimepiride in individuals with type 2 diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular disease; Cognitive decline; DPP-4 inhibitors; Sulfonylureas; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33559704 PMCID: PMC8099814 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-021-05393-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Baseline characteristics by treatment group
| Variables | Linagliptin | Glimepiride |
|---|---|---|
| Male/female | 1002 (61.9)/616 (38.1) | 958 (62.0)/587 (38.0) |
| Age, years | 64.4 ± 9.1 | 64.4 ± 9.3 |
| Medical history | ||
| History of myocardial infarction | 226 (14.0) | 187 (12.1) |
| History of cerebrovascular disease | 169 (10.4) | 154 (10.0) |
| Atrial fibrillation | 86 (5.3) | 74 (4.8) |
| Known coronary artery disease | 394 (24.4) | 366 (23.7) |
| Education level, years | 10.8±3.4 | 10.8±3.5 |
| BMI, kg/m2 | 30.8±5.0 | 30.7±4.9 |
| MMSE score | 28.5±1.7 | 28.5±1.7 |
| Depression score according to CES-D | 8.7±8.0 | 9.3±8.3 |
| < 16 | 1335 (82.5) | 1242 (80.4) |
| ≥ 16 | 250 (15.5) | 278 (18.0) |
| Missing | 33 (2.0) | 25 (1.6) |
| eGFR (MDRD), ml min−1 [1.73 m]−2 | 75.8±19.0 | 76.9±18.8 |
| Type 2 diabetes duration, years | 7.7±6.2 | 7.4±5.9 |
| HbA1c, mmol/mol (%) | 54.3±6.0 (7.1±0.5) | 54.5±6.2 (7.1±0.6) |
| Fasting plasma glucose, mmol/l | 7.8±1.7 | 7.8±1.6 |
| Glucose-lowering medications | ||
| Metformin | 1348 (83.3) | 1306 (84.5) |
| Sulfonylurea | 434 (26.8) | 422 (27.3) |
| Glinide | 13 (0.8) | 13 (0.8) |
| α-glucosidase inhibitor | 43 (2.7) | 34 (2.2) |
| Thiazolidinedione | 1 (0.1) | 2 (0.1) |
| Cardiovascular medications | ||
| Lipid-lowering | 1197 (74.0) | 1180 (76.4) |
| Statins | 1111 (68.7) | 1113 (72.0) |
| Antihypertensives | 1428 (88.3) | 1387 (89.8) |
| Systolic BP, mmHg | 135.9±15.9 | 136.2±16.4 |
| Diastolic BP, mmHg | 78.8±9.5 | 78.8±9.3 |
| LDL-cholesterol, mmol/l | 2.4±0.9 | 2.4±0.9 |
Data are n (%) or mean±SD unless otherwise stated
MDRD, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease study equation
Fig. 1Effect on ACD with linagliptin vs glimepiride at end of treatment. (a) Primary analysis and effects in prespecified subgroups. p values depict overall treatment effect (top value) or treatment-by-subgroup interaction. aThe lower age-group relates to number of participants enrolled specifically according to the age-specific inclusion-criterion. (b) Secondary analysis of effects on ACD with linagliptin vs glimepiride. Treatment group values are n with event/n analysed (%). EOT, end of treatment, T2D, type 2 diabetes. aIncidence of ACD based on 16th percentile of z score for MMSE and/or attention and executive functioning. bIncidence of ACD based on 10th percentile of RBI score. cIncidence of ACD at EOT based on MMSE score of <24 or a decline of >4 points in MMSE score at EOT relative to baseline
Absolute changes in MMSE, attention and executive function, TMT, VFT and CES-D by treatment
| Week 160a | End of follow-upb | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Linagliptin | Glimepiride | Linagliptin | Glimepiride | |
| MMSE score | ||||
| Baseline | 28.5±1.7 | 28.5±1.7 | 28.5±1.7 | 28.5±1.7 |
| Follow-up | 28.2±2.1 | 28.3±2.2 | 28.1±2.7 | 28.1±2.7 |
| Change from baseline | −0.2±2.0 | −0.2±2.1 | −0.4±2.6 | −0.4±2.6 |
| A&E ( | ||||
| Baseline | −0.01±0.70 | 0.01±0.01 | −0.01±0.70 | 0.01±0.01 |
| Follow-up | −0.06±0.73 | −0.05±0.71 | −0.10±0.77 | −0.09±0.78 |
| Change from baseline | −0.05±0.74 | −0.06±0.72 | −0.11±0.81 | −0.14±0.81 |
| VFT letter 60 (in seconds)d | ||||
| Baseline | 9.2±4.2 | 9.3±4.1 | 9.2±4.2 | 9.3±4.1 |
| Follow-up | 8.9±4.0 | 9.1±4.0 | 9.1±4.3 | 9.1±4.5 |
| Change from baseline | −0.2±2.6 | −0.2±2.7 | −0.2±2.9 | −0.2±3.4 |
| VFT animals 60 (in seconds)e | ||||
| Baseline | 16.1±6.6 | 16.0±6.2 | 16.1±6.6 | 16.0±6.2 |
| Follow-up | 15.6±6.6 | 15.6±6.5 | 15.7±7.5 | 15.4±7.1 |
| Change from baseline | −0.5±6.0 | −0.4±5.7 | −0.6±7.4 | −0.6±6.7 |
| Overall VFT 60 ( | ||||
| Baseline | −0.01±0.89 | 0.002±0.85 | −0.01±0.89 | 0.002±0.85 |
| Follow-up | −0.09±0.84 | −0.07±0.84 | −0.06±0.96 | −0.08±0.96 |
| Change from baseline | −0.07±0.63 | −0.06±0.64 | −0.07±0.78 | −0.09±0.76 |
| TMT-A (in seconds) | ||||
| Baseline | 51.2±28.1 | 50.4±26.7 | 51.2±28.1 | 50.4±26.7 |
| Follow-up | 53.7±30.3 | 53.3±30.6 | 54.1±30.6 | 55.4±33.3 |
| Change from baseline | 2.1±24.2 | 2.8±25.4 | 3.4±25.6 | 4.4±28.1 |
| TMT-B (in seconds) | ||||
| Baseline | 113.1±57.8 | 111.8±61.3 | 113.1±57.8 | 111.8±61.3 |
| Follow-up | 118.2±64.4 | 118.3±63.8 | 125.5±67.7 | 125.3±66.0 |
| Change from baseline | 7.1±53.9 | 9.8±54.1 | 15.2±63.3 | 18.2±59.5 |
| TMT ratiof | ||||
| Baseline | 1.4±1.0 | 1.4±1.0 | 1.4±1.0 | 1.4±1.0 |
| Follow-up | 1.4±1.0 | 1.4±1.0 | 1.6±1.1 | 1.5±1.0 |
| Change from baseline | 0.1±1.1 | 0.2±1.1 | 0.2±1.3 | 0.3±1.0 |
| CES-D score | ||||
| Baseline | 8.7±8.0 | 9.3±8.3 | 8.7±8.0 | 9.3±8.3 |
| Follow-up | 10.5±9.9 | 11.4±10.6 | 10.2±9.9 | 10.6±9.6 |
| Change from baseline | 1.7±9.6 | 2.1±10.4 | 1.6±9.6 | 1.4±10.0 |
Data are mean±SD
Time between randomisation and visit: median (min–max): a3.07 (0.02–3.19), b6.40 (3.20–7.42) years
cA&E, composite z score for attention and executive functioning
dVFT letter 60: averaged VFT scores for the letters F, A and S in 60 s
eVFT animals 60: VFT score for the category animals in 60 s
fTMT ratio: (TMT-B − TMT-A)/TMT-A