| Literature DB >> 35337110 |
Wiebe M C Top1, Adriaan Kooy2,3,4, Coen D A Stehouwer5.
Abstract
The biguanide metformin has been used as first-line therapy in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) treatment for several decades. In addition to its glucose-lowering properties and its prevention of weight gain, the landmark UK Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS) demonstrated cardioprotective properties in obese T2DM patients. Coupled with a favorable side effect profile and low cost, metformin has become the cornerstone in the treatment of T2DM worldwide. In addition, metformin is increasingly being investigated for its potential anticancer and neuroprotective properties both in T2DM patients and non-diabetic individuals. In the meantime, new drugs with powerful cardioprotective properties have been introduced and compete with metformin for its place in the treatment of T2DM. In this review we will discuss actual insights in the various working mechanisms of metformin and the evidence for its beneficial effects on (the prevention of) cardiovascular disease, cancer and dementia. In addition to observational evidence, emphasis is placed on randomized trials and recent meta-analyses to obtain an up-to-date overview of the use of metformin in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cardiovascular diseases; dementia; diabetes; metformin; pleiotropic effect
Year: 2022 PMID: 35337110 PMCID: PMC8951049 DOI: 10.3390/ph15030312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Mode of action of metformin in various physiological mechanisms.
| Physiological Mechanism | Molecular Mechanism | Target Tissue |
|---|---|---|
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| Decreased gluconeogenesis | Allosteric enzyme inhibition, redox state, complex 1 inhibition, AMPK activation | Liver [ |
| Increased glucose uptake muscles | Increase in glucose transporters by SHIP2 inhibition | Skeletal muscles [ |
| Increased gastrointestinal | Mitochondrial inhibition | Enterocyte [ |
| GLP-1 secretion | AMPK | Enteroendocrine L cell [ |
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| Anti-inflammatory | Decrease NFkB | Macrophage [ |
| Endothelial NO increase | AMPK | Endothelial cell [ |
| Decrease oxidative stress | Mitochondrial ion channels and AMPK | Endothelial cell [ |
| Hemostasis and leucocyte adhesion | Decrease in vWf and sVCAM-1 | Endothelial cell [ |
| Alternative energy substrate | Elevated lactate | Cardiomyocytes [ |
| Decrease oxidative stress | AMPK and PP2A | Cardiomyocytes [ |
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| Antiproliferation | Decrease mTOR | Tumor cells [ |
| Decreased insulin and free IGF-1 fraction | Tumor cells [ | |
| Reducing estrogen | Inhibition aromatase activity | Estrogen sensitive tumors [ |
| Inhibition of glycolysis | Hexokinase2 | Tumor cells [ |
| Decrease inflammation | Decrease NFkB | Macrophage [ |
| Decrease antioxidative stress | Mitochondrial ion channels | Epithelial cells [ |
| Inhibition of mesenchymal transition | Mitochondrial binding of copper | Tumor cells [ |
| Improving immune response | AMPK and AMPK independent changes in tumor microenvironment | Immune cells [ |
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| Decrease antioxidative stress | Mitochondrial | Microglia and neurons [ |
| Increase insulin sensitivity | AMPK | Neurons [ |
| Dephosphorylation proteins | AMPK and PP2A | Neurons [ |
| Increase autophagy | Decrease mTOR | Hippocampus microglia [ |
| Decrease inflammation | Decrease NFkB | Neurons [ |
vWf—von Willebrand factor; sVCAM-1—soluble vascular adhesion molecule-1; NO—nitric oxide; NFkB—nuclear factor kappa B; SHIP2—SH2-containing 5′-inositol phosphatase 2; PP2A—protein phosphatase 2; mTOR—mammalian target of rapamycin; IGF-1—insulin-like growth factor 1.
Figure 1AMPK—AMP protein kinase; OCT—organic cation transporter; mGPD—mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase; VDAC—voltage-dependent anion channel; mTOR—mammalian target of rapamycin.
Effect of metformin on cardiovascular outcomes in randomized trials.
| Study (Reference) | Participants | Comparator | Endpoint | RR/HR/OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual Trial | ||||
| UKPDS 1998 [ | Newly diagnosed T2DM, | Diet | All-cause mortality | 0.64 (0.45–0.91) |
| Any diabetes related endpoint | 0.68 (0.53–0.87) | |||
| UKPDS 2008 [ | Newly diagnosed T2DM, | Diet | All-cause mortality | 0.73 (0.59–0.89) |
| Any diabetes related endpoint | 0.79 (0.66–0.95) | |||
| HOME 2009 [ | Insulin using T2DM, | Placebo | Macrovascular aggregate score | 0.61 (0.40–0.94) |
| SPREAD-DIMCAD 2013 [ | T2DM with coronary artery disease, | Sulfonylurea | Macrovascular aggregate score | 0.54 (0.30–0.90) |
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| Lamanna 2011 [ | 10 | No therapy, placebo, active comparators | All-cause mortality | 1.10 (0.80–1.51) |
| 12 | Cardiovascular events | 0.94 (0.82–1.07) | ||
| Boussageon 2012 [ | 11 | Diet, placebo, no treatment, metformin add-on, metformin withdrawal | All-cause mortality | 0.99 (0.75–1.31) |
| 10 | Myocardial infarction | 0.90 (0.74–1.09) | ||
| Griffin 2017 [ | 13 | Diet, lifestyle, placebo | All-cause mortality | 0.96 (0.84–1.09) |
| 7 | Myocardial infarction | 0.89 (0.75–1.06) | ||
| Monami 2021 [ | 13 | Placebo/no therapy, active comparators | All-cause mortality | 0.80 (0.60–1.07) |
| 2 | MACE | 0.52 (0.37–0.73) |
MACE—major adverse cardiovascular event; RR—risk ratio; HR—hazard ratio; OR—odds ratio; CI—confidence interval.
Effect of T2DM on cancer mortality and incidence.
| Mortality | T2DM Relative Risk (95% CI) |
|---|---|
| Breast cancer | 1.24 (0.95–1.62) |
| Colorectal cancer | 1.20 (1.03–1.40) |
| Endometrial cancer | 1.23 (0.78–1.93) |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 2.43 (1.67–3.55) |
| Total cancer mortality | 1.16 (1.04–1.30) |
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| |
| Breast cancer | 1.20 (1.12–1.28) |
| Colorectal cancer | 1.27 (1.21–1.34) |
| Endometrial cancer | 1.97 (1.71–2.27) |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 2.31 (1.87–2.84) |
| Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma | 1.97 (1.57–2.46) |
| Pancreatic cancer | 1.95 (1.66–2.28) |
| Total cancer incidence | 1.10 (1.04–1.17) |
Relative risk compared to non-diabetic individuals. Summary random effects estimate from 27 meta-analyses derived from Tsilidis et al. [77].
Effect of metformin vs. active comparator in T2DM patients on cancer incidence and mortality.
| Study (Reference) | Measure | Number of Cases | Breast Cancer | Colorectal Cancer | Lung Cancer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tseng 2014 [ | Incidence | ~500k | 0.63 (0.60–0.67) | ||
| Libby 2009 [ | Incidence | ~8000 | 0.60 (0.32–1.10) | 0.60 (0.38–0.94) | 0.70 (0.43–1.15) |
| Chen 2017 [ | Incidence | ~45k | 0.86 (0.70–1.05) ER− | ||
| Hui 2021 [ | Mortality OS * | ~4000 | 0.39 (0.25–0.60) | ||
| Wang 2021 [ | Incidence | ~2 million | 0.71 (0.64–0.80) | ||
| Mortality OS | 0.72 (0.62–0.83) | ||||
| Mortality | 0.80 (0.70–0.92) | ||||
| Xiao 2020 [ | Incidence | ~200k | 0.78 (0.70–0.86) | ||
| Mortality OS | 0.65 (0.55–0.77) |
Hazard ratio (95% confidence interval); OS—overall survival; CRC—colorectal cancer; ER—estrogen receptor; *—compared to non-diabetic individuals.
Effect of metformin on cognitive function and dementia.
| Study (Reference) | Participants | Comparator | Endpoint | OR/HR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Samaras 2020 [ | Non-metformin T2DM treatment | Dementia | 0.19 (0.04–0.85) | |
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| Campbell 2018 [ | 3 | Non-metformin T2DM treatment | Cognitive impairment | 0.55 (0.38–0.78) |
| 6 | Dementia | 0.76 (0.60–0.97) | ||
| Ping 2020 [ | 23 | Non-metformin T2DM treatment | Overall neurodegenerative disease | 1.04 (0.92–1.17) |
| 17 | Dementia | 0.96 (0.85–1.08) | ||
| 3 | Parkinsons disease | 1.66 (1.14–2.42) | ||
| Zhou 2020 [ | 9 | Diet | Dementia | 0.75 (0.63–0.86) |
| 14 | Dementia | 0.86 (0.74–1.00) |
OR—odds ratio; HR—hazard ratio; CI—confidence interval; T2DM—type 2 diabetes mellitus.