comparisons of dpp-4 inhibitors: focus on januvia...

23
Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin) DPP-4= Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4 Sihoon Lee Gachon Univ School of Med

Upload: others

Post on 31-Dec-2019

4 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors:

Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)

DPP-4= Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4

Sihoon Lee

Gachon Univ School of Med

Page 2: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Agenda

DPP-4 inhibition rate and duration of DPP-4 inhibitors

Non-inferiority design clinical trials of JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin)

PK comparisons of DPP-4 inhibitors

DPP-4 inhibitors in T2DM patients with renal impairment

Selectivity of DPP-4 inhibitors

JANUVIA (Sitagliptin) vs. Sulfonylurea

DPP-4= Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4; PK=Pharmacokinetics; T2DM=Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

Page 3: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

DPP-4 Inhibition Rate and Efficacy of JANUVIA® (sitagliptin) in Animal Studies

In general, inhibition of DPP-IV activity by

80% or greater or a 2-fold augmentation of

postprandial, active GLP-1 levels (or both)

was associated with a maximal or near-

maximal short-term lowering of glucose

levels in some animal studies.

DPP-4=Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4; GLP-1=glucagon-like peptide-1

1. Herman GA et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2005;78:675-688.

Page 4: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Day 1

DPP-4 Inhibition Rate and Duration: Rationale for Once-Daily or Twice-Daily Dosing

DPP-4=dipeptidyl peptidase-4; qd=once daily; OGTT=oral glucose tolerance tests

1. Alba M et al. Curr Med Res Opin. 2009;25(10):2507–2514. Electronic supplementary data published in conjunction with Alba M et al. Curr Med Res Opin. 2009;25:2507–2514. doi: 10.1185/03007990902109514. 2. He

YL et al. J Clin Pharmacol. 2007;47: 633–641. 3. Tahrani AA et al. Adv Ther. 2009;26(3):249–262. 4. Heise T et al. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2009;11:786–794. 5. Herman GA et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2005;78:675-688.

Saxagliptin3

DPP-4 peak inhibition : 80%

100

80

60

40

20

00 4 8 12 16 20 24

Time postdose (hr)

DP

P-4

In

hib

itio

n,

%

The DPP-4 inhibitory effect of saxagliptin was measured in 2 double-blind, randomized 2-week studies:•Study 1 in 40 patients with type 2 diabetes who received once-daily doses of saxagliptin 2.5–50 mg, or placebo•Study 2 in 50 healthy individuals who received once-daily doses of saxagliptin 40–400 mg, or placeboGraph is derived from mean values from study 1 and study 2 on day 1.3

Saxagliptin 2.5 mg (n=6)

Saxagliptin 5 mg (n=5 or 6)

Day1

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin)1

DPP-4 peak

inhibition : 97%100

80

60

40

20

00 4 8 12 16 24

Time postdose (hr)

DP

P-4

In

hib

itio

na,

%

The time profiles for mean plasma DPP-4 inhibition after administration of a single oral dose of sitagliptin 100 mg to healthy subjects. As shown, the weighted average mean DPP-4 inhibition over 24 hours with sitagliptin 100 mg was 97%.1

The DPP-4 inhibition curve shown here was generated by applying a mathematical correction to previously published sitagliptin results from a single-dose study (5–400 mg) in healthy men. The uncorrected 24-hour weighted average mean DPP-4 inhibition was 87%.1,5

Sitagliptin 100 mg qd (n=6)

a DPP-4 inhibition corrected for sample assay dilution.1

Single-dose study in healthy subjects

Vildagliptin2

DPP-4 peak inhibition : 96%

The DPP-4 inhibitory effect of vildagliptin was measured in a single-center, randomized, open-label, placebo-controlled, 7-period crossover study in 16 patients with type 2 diabetes diagnosed at least 3 months previously. On each study day, following an overnight fast (≥10 hours), patients omitted breakfast and received single oral doses of placebo or vildagliptin (10–400 mg). A 75-g oral glucose load was consumed 30 minutes after study drug. Plasma DPP-4 activity was determined at prespecified time points during the 24 hours following the oral glucose load. Data were not corrected for assay dilution effects.2

Single oral dose study in patients with type 2 diabetes

These data support the rationale for dosing frequency,

but does not have implications for clinical efficacy of the product when dosed as recommended.

Linagliptin4

DPP-4 peak inhibition : 92%b

100

80

60

40

20

00 4 8 12 16 20 24

Time postdose (hr)

DP

P-4

In

hib

itio

n,

%

Placebo (n=12)

Linagliptin 5mg qd (n=8)

This randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind,two-centre, multiple rising dose study was carried out in four sequential groups, each comprising 12 male type 2 diabetic patients, nine receiving linagliptin (in rising doses per cohort of 1, 2.5, 5 or 10 mg) and three receiving placebo once daily for 12 days in order to investigate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of multiple oral doses of linagliptin in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. 4

b At steady state4

In patients with type 2 diabetes

Vildagliptin 50 mg (n=16)

Placebo

Vildagliptin 100 mg (n=15)

100

75

50

25

0

-250 2 4 12 16 20 24

Day 1

DP

P-4

In

hib

itio

n,

%

6 8 10

Time postdose, h

Page 5: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Non-Inferiority design Clinical trials of JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin)

T2DM=type II Diabetes Mellitus; OHA=oral antihyperglycemic agents; MET=metformin; SD=standard deviation; LSM=least squares mean; CI=confidence interval; SE=standard error

1. Aschner P et al. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2010;12:252-261. 2. Nauck MA et al; for the sitagliptin study 024 group. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2007;9(2):194–205. 3. Arechavaleta R et al.

Diabetes Obes Metab. 2011;13:160-168. 4. Scheen AJ et al. Diabetes Metab Res Rev. 2010;26:540-549.

† Data from all randomized patients.‡ Adjusted change from baseline

Study

Use of OHAs at screen-

ing (mg/day)

NActive

comparator (mg/day)

Study

Dura-

tion

(Week)

Difference in HbA1c

(%) LSM change (95% CI) between

sitagliptin and comparator

Aschner

P, et al.

20101

Drug naive

455

24

0.14

(0.06, 0.21)Sitagliptin 100

439 Metformin500~ 2000

Nauck

MA, et al.

20072

Met ≥ 1500

382

52

-0.01

(-0.09, 0.08)Sitagliptin 100

411 Glipizide 5~20

Arechav

aleta R,

et al.

20113

Met ≥ 1500

443

30

0.07

(-0.03, 0.16)Sitagliptin 100

436 Glimepiride 1~6

Scheen

AJ, et al.

20104

Met ≥

1500

343

18

Sitagliptin 100

0.09‡

(-0.01, 0.20)334 Saxagliptin

Duration of T2DM (years)

Mean±SD

2.6±3.9

2.1±3.5

6.5±6.1†

6.2±5.4†

6.8±4.6†

6.7±4.8†

6.3±4.7†

6.3±5.0†

Baseline

HbA1c (%)

Mean±SD

7.2 ± 0.7

7.2 ± 0.7

7.48±0.76

7.52±0.85

7.48 ± 0.68

7.49 ± 0.74

7.69

(SE 0.047)

7.68

(SE 0.052)

Follow-up HbA1c (%)

Mean±SD

6.8 ± 0.7

6.7 ± 0.6

6.84±0.66

6.86±0.69

7.04 ± 0.83

6.98 ± 0.89

7.07

(SE 0.051)

7.16

(SE 0.052)

HbA1c (%)

LSM change from baseline

(95% CI)

-0.43

(-0.48, -0.38)

-0.57

(-0.62, -0.51)

-0.67

(-0.75, -0.59)

-0.67

(-0.75, -0.59)

-0.47

(-0.55, -0.39)

-0.54

(-0.62, -0.45)

-0.62‡

(-0.69, -0.54)

-0.52‡

(-0.60, -0.45)5

Aschner P, et al : A multinational,

double-blind, randomized, active-

controlled, noninferiority study

evaluating the efficacy and safety of

sitagliptin (100 mg once daily) compared

with metformin (uptitrated from 500

mg/day to 2000 mg/day for all patients

over a maximum of 5 weeks) in 1050

patients with type 2 diabetes (not taking

an antihyperglycemic agent for at least

16 weeks prior to study entry) with

inadequate glycemic control (HbA1c

≥6.5% to ≤9%). The primary analysis

assessed non-inferiority for HbA1c

change from baseline at 24 weeks using

the PP population.1

Nauck MA, et al. : A multinational,

randomized, double-blind, parallel-group

study evaluating the effect of adding

sitagliptin (100 mg once daily)

vs glipizide (≥5–≤20 mg/day) to

metformin in 1172 patients with T2DM

inadequately controlled with ≥1500

mg/day metformin (HbA1c ≥6.5% to

≤10%). The primary analysis assessed

noninferiority for HbA1c change from

baseline at week 52 using a PP approach

(patients who completed all 52 weeks of

treatment and did not have any reason

for exclusion).2

Arechavaleta R, et al. : A multinational,

double-blind, randomized, parallel-group,

noninferiority study evaluating the effect

of adding sitagliptin (100 mg once daily)

vs glimepiride (≥1–≤6 mg/day) to

metformin in 1035 patients with T2DM

inadequately controlled with ≥1500

mg/day metformin for ≥12 weeks (HbA1c

≥6.5%–≤9%). The primary analysis was

HbA1c change from baseline at 30 weeks

using a PP approach.3

Scheen AJ, et al. : See next page for

study design.

Study Design

Per-Protocol(PP) population result

*Prespecified non-

inferiority

margin=0.40%.

*Prespecified non-

inferiority

margin=0.3%.

*Prespecified non-

inferiority

margin=0.4%.

*Prespecified non-

inferiority

margin=0.30%.

Page 6: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Saxagliptin vs JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin) Head-to-HeadNoninferiority Study: Design1

qd=once daily. 1. Scheen AJ et al. Diabetes Metab Res Rev. 2010;26(7):540–549.

Primary efficacy objective: to assess if the change in HbA1c from baseline to 18 weeks achieved with

saxagliptin 5 mg/day added to metformin is noninferior to sitagliptin 100 mg/day added to metformin in

patients with type 2 diabetes who have inadequate glycemic control on ≥1,500 mg metformin monotherapy.

• Patients with type

2 diabetes (N=801)

• Aged ≥18 years

• Receiving metformin

monotherapy

• HbA1c 6.5%–10%

Stable dose of metformin ≥1,500 mg/day

Sitagliptin 100 mg qd (n=398)

Saxagliptin 5 mg qd (n=403)

Double-blind treatment periodScreening period

Screening

visit

Week 0

Randomization

Week 18

Page 7: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Ch

an

ge

Fro

m B

ase

lin

e i

n

Ad

just

ed

Me

an

Hb

A1

c(S

E),

%

0.00

-0.15

-0.30

-0.45

-0.60

-0.75

Mean baseline HbA1c, % 7.69 7.68

Saxagliptin Was Noninferior to JANUVIA®(Sitagliptin)in Reducing HbA1c at 18 Weeks1

In the FAS population,

numerically greater

HbA1c reductions from

baseline were observed for

sitagliptin 100 mg compared

with saxagliptin 5 mg.

Difference between groups:

0.17% (95% CI: 0.06, 0.28)

Primary End Point (Per-Protocol Population; on background of metformin therapy)

Sitagliptin 100 mg + metformin

Saxagliptin 5 mg + metformin

0.09 (95% CI: –0.01, 0.20)a

(Prespecified noninferiority

margin=0.30%)

CI=confidence interval; FAS=full-analysis-set; SE=standard error.aDifference in adjusted change from baseline vs sitagliptin + metformin.

1. Scheen AJ et al. Diabetes Metab Res Rev. 2010;26(7):540–549.

–0.62(95% CI: –0.69, –0.54)

–0.52(95% CI: –0.60, –0.45)

n=343 n=334

Page 8: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin) Resulted in Significantly Greater Reductions in FPG Than Saxagliptin at 18 Weeks1

FP

G L

S M

ea

n (±

SE

) C

ha

ng

e F

rom

Ba

seli

ne

, m

mo

l/L

0

-0.3

-0.6

-0.9

-1.2

Mean baseline FPG,

mmol/L8.89 8.86

0.30 (95% CI: 0.08, 0.53)a

CI=confidence interval; FAS=full-analysis-set; FPG=fasting plasma glucose; LS=least squares; SE=standard error.aBetween-groups difference vs sitagliptin + metformin.

1. Scheen AJ et al. Diabetes Metab Res Rev. 2010;26(7):540–549.

-0.90

-0.60

Secondary End Point (FAS Population; on background of metformin therapy)

n=392 n=397 Sitagliptin 100 mg + metformin

Saxagliptin 5 mg + metformin

Page 9: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Pharmacokinetic Properties of DPP-4 Inhibitors

DPP-4=dipeptidyl peptidase-4 ; N/A=Not available.

1. JANUVIA EU prescribing information, MSD. 2. Vildagliptin EU prescribing information. 3. Saxagliptin EU prescribing information. 4. EPAR for Saxagliptin.

Available at: http://www.ema.europa.eu/docs/en_GB/document_library/EPAR_-_Public_assessment_report/human/001039/WC500044319.pdf. 5. Heise T et al. Diabetes Obes

Metab. 2009;11:786–794. 6. Reitlich S et al. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2010;49:829–840. 7. Fuchs H et al. J Pharm Pharmacol. 2009;61:55–62. 8. Blech S et al.

Drug Metab Dispos.2010;38:667–678. 9. Linagliptin EU prescribing information.

JANUVIA®

(Sitagliptin)1 Vildagliptin2 Saxagliptin3 Linagliptin5-9

Absorption tmax(median)

Bioavailability

1–4 h87%

1.7 h85%

2 h (4 h for active metabolite)

>75%4

2 h30%

Half-life (t1/2) atclinically

relevant dose12.4 h 2-3 h

2.5 h (parent)

3.1 h (metabolite)

113–131 h(1–10 mg)

Metabolism 16% metabolized69% metabolized

mainly renal (inactive metabolite)

Hepatic

(active metabolite) CYP3A4/5

10% metabolized

Distribution 38% protein bound

9.3% protein bound

Neglibible protein binding

Prominent concentration-dependent protein binding:

99% at 1nmol/l75%–89% at ≥30nmol/l

Elimination Renal 87%(79% unchanged)

Renal 85%(23% unchanged)

Renal 75%(24% as parent;

36% as active metabolite)

Feces 80%Urine 5%

Data not representative of head-to-head trials. Not all pharmacokinetic data are from studies

using locally approved dosage.

Page 10: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

10

Recommendations for Diabetes and CKD1

2007 KDOQI guideline

Management Topic Target / Action

Screening and diagnosis of

Diabetic kidney disease

Urinary albumin-creatinine ratio in a spot urine sample

Serum creatinine - eGFR

Management of

Hyperglycemia and General

Diabetes Care in CKD

Target HbA1c for people with diabetes should be <7.0%, irrespective of the

presence or absence of CKD.

In case of intensive treatment,

- monitor patients' glucose levels closely

- reduce doses of medicines (insulin and oral agents) as needed to avoid hypoglycemia

Should be treated with an ACE inhibitor or an ARB, usually in combination with a

diuretic.

Target blood pressure should be <130/80 mmHg

Hypertension*

Dyslipidemia*

Target LDL-C should be <100 mg/dL (<70 mg/dL is a therapeutic option)

LDL-C ≥100 mg/dL should be treated with a statin

Treatment with a statin should not be initiated in patients with type 2 diabetes

on maintenance hemodialysis therapy who do not have a specific cardiovascular

indication for treatment.

Comorbid

diseases

Nutrition* Target dietary protein intake should be the RDA of 0.8 g/kg body weight per day

CKD=Chronic Kidney Disease; eGFR= estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate; ACE=Angiotensin Converting Enzyme; ARB=Angiotensin Receptor Blocker;

LDL-C=low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; RDA=Recommended Daily Allowance; KDOQI=Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative

1. KDOQI. Am J Kidney Dis. 2007;49(2,Supp12):S12-154.

* for people with diabetes and CKD stage 1-4

Page 11: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Severe(n=7)

<30

Plasma exposure of DPP-4 Inhibitors in non-diabetic patients with various degrees of renal insufficiency

Fo

ld i

ncr

ea

se i

n e

xp

osu

re (

AU

C0

-∞)

Re

lati

ve

to

no

rma

l re

na

l fu

nct

ion

[GM

R (

90

% C

l)] 7

6

5

4

3

2

1

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin)1

Normal†

(n=151†)

>80

Mild(n=6)

50 to 80

Moderate(n=6)

30 to 50

Severe(n=6)

<30

ESRD(n=6)

on HD

Renal impairment status

Creatinine clearance

(ml/min)

Fo

ld i

ncr

ea

se i

n e

xp

osu

re (

AU

C)

Re

lati

ve

to

no

rma

l re

na

l fu

nct

ion

[Me

an

] 7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Vildagliptin2

Normal Mild

50 to 80

Moderate

30 to 50

Severe

<30

ESRD

Renal impairment status

Fo

ld i

ncr

ea

se i

n e

xp

osu

re (

AU

C∞

)

Re

lati

ve

to

no

rma

l re

na

l fu

nct

ion

[GM

R] 7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Saxagliptin3 (5-hydroxy saxagliptin-metabolite)

Normal(n=8)

>80

Mild(n=8)

>50 to ≤80

Moderate(n=8)

≥30 and ≤50

ESRD(n=8)

on HD

Renal impairment status

Creatinine clearance

(ml/min)

Fo

ld i

ncr

ea

se i

n e

xp

osu

re (

AU

C0

-24)

Re

lati

ve

to

no

rma

l re

na

l fu

nct

ion

[G

MR

(9

0%

CI)

]

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Linagliptin4

Normal(n=6)

>80

Mild(n=6)

>50 and ≤80

Moderate(n=6)

>30 and ≤ 50

Severe(n=6)

≤30

ESRD(n=6)

≤ 30 on HD

Renal impairment status

Creatinine clearance

(ml/min)

DPP-4=Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4; ESRD=end-stage renal disease; HD=hemodialysis; AUC=area under the curve; GMR=geometric mean ratio; CI=clearance; T2DM=type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

† The study involved 6 subjects with normal renal func>on and the data from these subjects were then combined with data from 145 more subjects with normal renal function from 11 other studies.1

1. Bergman AJ et al. Diabetes Care. 2007; 30(7):1862-1864. 2. Vildagliptin EU prescribing information. 3. Boulton DW et al. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2011;50(4):253-265. 4. Graefe-Mody U et al. Diabetes, Obes Metab. 2011;13:939-946.

A parallel-group, open-label, pharmacokinetic study under 5mg linagliptin single-dose

and steady-state conditions in subjects with mild, moderate, and severe renal

impairment(with and without T2DM), ESRD and subjects with normal renal function

(with and without T2DM). The data presented are from single-dose condition in

subjects without T2DM.4

An open-label trial was conducted to evaluate the

pharmacokinetics of the lower therapeutic dose

of vildagliptin (50 mg once daily) in patients with

varying degrees of chronic renal impairment

defined by creatinine clearance compared to

normal healthy control subjects.2

A single-dose, open-label study evaluated the

pharmacokinetics of sitagliptin 50 mg in patients with

varying degrees of renal insufficiency compared with that

of healthy (control) subjects. The study included 30

patients with renal insufficiency classified on the basis of

creatinine clearance as mild (50-80 mL/min), moderate

(30-50 mL/min), and severe (<30 mL/min), as well as

patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) on

hemodialysis. (Normal [>80ml/min]).1

An open-label, parallel-group, single-dose study was

conducted. Subjects received a single oral dose of

saxagliptin 10 mg(two 5 mg tablets) to compare the

pharmacokinetics and tolerability of saxagliptin and its

pharmacologically active metabolite, 5-hydroxy

saxagliptin, in nondiabetic subjects with mild, moderate

or severe renal or hepatic impairment, or end-stage

renal disease (ESRD) in healthy adult subjects.3

In a single-dose, open-label pharmacokinetic study In a multiple-dose, open-label trial evaluating

pharmacokinetics

In an open-label, single-dose study In a single-dose, open label study

Creatinine clearance

(ml/min)

1.6

2.3

3.8

4.5

1.4 1.72.0

Limited data

from patients

with ESRD

indicate that

vildagliptin

exposure is

similar to that in

patients with

severe renal

impairment.

1.3

1.61.4 1.5

1.7

2.9

4.5

4.1

Page 12: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Effect of Creatinine Clearance on Plasma Concentration AUC of a Single Dose of JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin)

AUC=area under the curve; GMR=geometric mean ratio; CrCl:Creatinine clearance

1. Bergman AJ et al. Diabetes Care. 2007;30:1862-1864.

2. Data on file, MSD Korea.

3. JANUVIA® prescribing information, MSD Korea.

Creatinine Clearance (mL/min)

28

24

20

16

12

8

4

0

Do

se-A

dju

ste

d (

to 5

0 m

g)

AU

C (

uM

.hr)

10 30 50 70 90 110 130 150 170 190 210 230

AUC Increases With Decreasing Creatinine Clearance Necessitating

a Dose Reduction to Maintain Therapeutic Concentration

AUC GMR increase <2-fold

when CrCl ≥50 mL/min

Dose adjustments

CrCl <30 mL/min – ¼ dose

CrCl 30 – 50 mL/min – ½ dose

CrCl ≥50 mL/min – full dose

In a single-dose, open-label pharmacokinetic study,

To achieve plasma concentrations of sitagliptin similar to those in patients with normal renal function, lower dosages are

recommended in patients with moderate and severe renal insufficiency, as well as in ESRD patients requiring hemodialysis.3

Page 13: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Dosage of DPP-4 Inhibitors in Renal Impairment

DPP-4=dipeptidyl peptidase-4; BID=twice a day; QD=once a day; TZD=thiazolidinedione; SU=sulphonylurea

a Monotherapy, Initial combination therapy with Metformin, and Add-on combination therapy to Metformin, or TZD when the single agent alone does

not provide adequate glycemic control.

b Monotherapy, Initial combination therapy with Metformin, and Add-on combination therapy to SU when the single agent alone does not provide

adequate glycemic control.

c Monotherapy, Initial combination therapy with Metformin , Add-on combination therapy to Metformin, TZD, or SU when the single agent alone does

not provide adequate glycemic control, and Add-on combination therapy to Insulin(alone or with metformin) when the Insulin therapy does not

provide adequate glycemic control.

d Monotherapy, and Add-on combination therapy to Metformin, TZD, or SU when the single agent alone does not provide adequate glycemic control.

e ESRD requiring hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis.

f ESRD requiring hemodialysis.

1. JANUVIA 제품설명서, MSD Korea. 2. Vildagliptin 제품설명서. 3. Saxagliptin 제품설명서. 4. Linagliptin 제품설명서.

*2012년 12월 3일, 각제품의제품설명서정보기준

JANUVIA®(Sitagliptin)1

Patients with normal renal

function100mg QD

Vildagliptin2 Saxagliptin3 Linagliptin4

Renal impairment:

Dosage

adjustment is

not necessary

50mg BIDa

50mg QDb

Dosage adjustment is not necessary

5mg QDc

2.5mg QDd

Dosage adjustment is not necessary

5mg QD

Dosage adjustment is not necessary

Mild

Moderate

Severe

ESRD

50mg QD 50mg QD 2.5mg QD

25mg QD 50mg QD 2.5mg QD

25mg QDe 50mg QD 2.5mg QDf

Page 14: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

DPP-4 Is a Member of a Family of Closely Related Proteases1

APP=aminopeptidase P; DPP=dipeptidyl peptidase; FAP=fibroblast activation protein; PEP=prolyl endopeptidase;

QPP=quiescent cell proline dipeptidase.

1. Drucker DJ. Diabetes Care. 2007;30(6):1335–1343.

DPP9

DPP8

FAP

DPP-4

DPP6

PEP

QPP/DPPII

APP

prolidase

DPP-4 Gene

Family

Other Proline- Specific

Peptidases

Page 15: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Comparative Toxicity Studies

Inhibition of DPP-8 and/or DPP-9 results in multi-organ toxicities in rats and dogs

2 week rat study at 10, 30, 100mg/kg/day; acute dog at 10mg/kg

2 wk. Rat Toxicity

alopecia

thrombocytopenia

anemia

enlarged spleen

mortality

Non-Selective QPP Selective DPP-8/9 Selective DPP-4 Selective

Bloody diarrhea

Acute Dog Toxicity Non-Selective QPP Selective DPP-8/9 Selective DPP-4 Selective

1. Lankas GR et al. Diabetes. 2005;54(10):2988-2994.

Page 16: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

In vitro Selectivity of DPP-4 Inhibitors

DPP=Dipeptidyl Peptidase; FAPα=Fibroblast Activation Protein α; QPP=quiescent cell proline dipeptidase; IC50=inhibitory concentration 50%

1. Deacon CF. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2011;13:7–18.

JANUVIA®(Sitagliptin) Vildagliptin Saxagliptin Linagliptin

DDP-8

DDP-9

FAPα

QPP/DPP-2

Fold selectivity for DPP-4 vs. other enzymes in IC50

> 2660 270 390 40000

> 5550 32 77 >10000

> 5550 285 > 4000 89

> 5550 > 100000 > 50000 > 100000

Data not representative of head-to-head trials.

The consequences, if any, of differences in protease selectivity are not established.

DPP-4 inhibitors in this slide are considered DPP-4 selective inhibitors.

Page 17: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

LS M

ea

n (±

SE

) H

bA

1c,

%8.0

7.8

7.6

7.4

7.2

7.0

6.8

6.6

6.4

6.2

6.0

Week

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin) vs. Glimepiride Added to

Metformin : Sitagliptin achieved non-inferiority to

glimepiride

0 6 12 18 24 30

† Data from all randomized pa>ents.

LS=least squares; SE=standard error; T2DM=Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

a Mean dose of glimepiride (following the 18-week titration period) was 2.1 mg per day.

1. Arechavaleta R et al. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2011;13(2):160–168.

Average T2DM Duration: 6.7-6.8 years†

-0.54

-0.47

△(95% CI)

0.07% (–0.03, 0.16)

JANUVIA (Sitagliptin) 100 mg + metformin (n=443)

Glimepiridea + metformin (n=436)

Per-Protocol Population

A multinational, double-blind, randomized, parallel-group, noninferiority study evaluating the effect of adding sitagliptin (100 mg once daily) vs

glimepiride (≥1 -≤6 mg/day) to metformin in 1035 patients with T2DM inadequately controlled with ≥1500 mg/day metformin for ≥12 weeks (HbA1c

≥6.5% -≤9%). The primary analysis was HbA1c change from baseline at 30 weeks using a PP approach.

Page 18: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin) vs. Glimepiride :

Body Weight Change and Hypoglycemia over

week 30

APaT=all patients as treated; LS=least squares; SE=standard error

a Mean dose of glimepiride (following the 18-week titration period) was 2.1 mg per day.

1. Arechavaleta R et al. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2011;13(2):160–168.

Weight Change

1.5

1.0

0.5

-0.5

-1.5

0

-1.0

Sitagliptin 100 mg

Added to Metformin

(n=465)

Glimepiridea

Added to Metformin

(n=461)

LS M

ea

n C

ha

ng

e (±

SE

) in

Bo

dy

We

igh

t F

rom

Ba

seli

ne

, k

g

△= -2.0 kgP<0.001

Cumulative Incidence

of Hypoglycemia25

20

10

0

15

5

Sitagliptin 100mg

Added to Metformin

(n=516)

Glimepiridea

Added to Metformin

(n=518)P

ati

en

ts w

ith

≥1

Hy

po

gly

cem

ic E

pis

od

e,

%

Δ (95% CI)

–15.0%

(–19.3, –10.9)

P<0.001

Patients on Sitagliptin experienced a small weight loss while those on glimepiride

gained weight, resulting in a significant between group difference of 2.0kg (p<0.001).

Incidence of hypoglycemia was lower with sitagliptin therapy.

APaT Population

+1.2kg

-0.8kg

7%

22%

Page 19: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Cardiovascular Safety of JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin)vs a Sulphonylurea in Patients with T2DM: a Pooled Analysis

Objective: To compare the incidence of CV-related events with sitagliptin

100mg/day versus sulphonylurea in patients with T2DM

Cardiovascular Safety of Sitagliptin versus a

Sulphonylurea in Patients with T2DM:

a Pooled AnalysisBarry J. Goldstein, Samuel S. Engel, Gregory T. Golm, Michael J. Davies, Keith D. Kaufman

1

Design: Post hoc CV safety analysis (N = 2,451) of 3 randomized, double-

blinded clinical trials

• Add-on to metformin trial for 104 weeks: sitagliptin vs. glipizide

• Add-on to metformin trial for 30 weeks: sitagliptin vs. glimepiride

• Monotherapy trial for 104 weeks: sitagliptin vs. glipizide

2

A post hoc CV safety analysis was performed using custom major adverse CV events (MACE) that incorporated ischaemic events and CV deaths,

without adjudication of these events. Exposure-adjusted incidence rates stratified by study were calculated. The cumulative incidence of custom

MACE was evaluated over the duration of each study.

T2DM=type 2 Diabetes Mellitus; CV=cardiovascular

1. Data on file, MSD Korea.

Page 20: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin) vs. SU : Pooled analysis of 3 trials

Data are expressed as mean ± SD, frequency (n [%]), or median (*).BMI=body mass index; T2DM=type II Diabetes Mellitus; CVD=cardiovascular disease; CV=cardiovascular; SU= Sulphonylurea; SD=Standard Deviation

1. Data on file, MSD Korea.

CharacteristicJANUVIA®

(Sitagliptin)(n=1226)

Sulphonylurea (n=1225)

Age, years 56.4±9.5 56.3±10.0

Male, n(%) 685 (56) 706 (58)

BMI, kg/m2 30.5±4.9 30.8±4.9

Duration of T2DM, years* 5.0 5.0

History of dyslipidemia, n(%) 657 (54) 650 (53)

History of hypertension, n(%) 744 (61) 725 (59)

History of smoking, n(%) 448 (41) 463 (42)

HbA1c % 7.6±0.8 7.6±0.9

History of CVD, n(%) 153 (12) 148 (12)

Proportion of patients with known

CV risk factors other than T2DM and

history of CVD, n(%)

941 (85) 934 (85)

Baseline Characteristics

Page 21: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

CharacteristicJANUVIA

(Sitagliptin)(n=1226)

Sulphonylurea

(n=1225)

Cumulative exposure, Patient-years 1269 1274

MACE, n 0 11

Incidence rate per 100 patient-years 0 0.9

Difference in incidence rate (95% CI)=-0.9 (-1.6, -0.5)

Risk ratio= 0.00 (0.00, 0.31)

MACE

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin) vs. SU : Pooled analysis of 3 trials

MACE=major adverse cardiovascular events; SU=Sulphonylurea; CI=Confidence Interval; CV=cardiovascular

1. Data on File, MSD Korea.

Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) were assessed

- Included ischaemic events and CV deaths

- No formal adjudication of these events

Page 22: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

In other JANUVIA® (sitagliptin) Pooled Safety Analysis: No Difference in MACEa

Between Sitagliptin and Non-exposed Groups1

JANUVIA

(Sitagliptin)

n=5,429

Non-exposed

n=4,817

Between-Groups

Difference (95% CI)b

Relative Risk Ratio (95% CI)

Incidence Rate per 100 Patient-Years

Adverse

Experience

0.6 0.9 –0.3 (–0.7, 0.1) 0.68 (0.41, 1.12)MACE

CI=confidence interval; MACE=major adverse cardiovascular events. aThere was no adjudication of any cardiac event.bBetween-groups difference and 95% CI based on stratified analysis. Positive differences indicate that the incidence rate for the sitagliptin group was higher than the incidence

rate for the non-exposed group.

1. Williams-Herman D et al. BMC Endocr Disord. 2010;10:7.

Custom MACE analysis with terms similar to those requested by the US Food and Drug Administration for recent

MACE analyses with other antihyperglycemic agents

Total of 64 patients with at least 1 MACE-related event

This pooled safety analysis included 19 double-blind, randomized, controlled clinical studies up to 2 years in duration, for which results were available as of July 2009. For this

analysis, 10,246 patients from the 19 clinical trials were divided into 2 groups: the sitagliptin 100 mg/day group (n=5,429) and the non-exposed group (n=4,817). The

sitagliptin group consisted of patients who received sitagliptin 100 mg/day alone or in combination with other oral antihyperglycemic agents, including metformin,

pioglitazone, sulfonylurea (with or without metformin), rosiglitazone plus metformin, and insulin (with or without metformin). The non-exposed group consisted of patients

who did not receive sitagliptin treatment during their respective studies. These patients received therapy with placebo, metformin, pioglitazone, sulfonylurea (with or

without metformin), rosiglitazone (with or with metformin), and insulin (with or without metformin).1

Page 23: Comparisons of DPP-4 Inhibitors: Focus on JANUVIA (Sitagliptin)icdm2013.diabetes.or.kr/slide/Breafast 3.pdf · 2013-11-15 · (sitagliptin)in Animal Studies In general, inhibition

Summary

JANUVIA® (Sitagliptin) substantially reduces glucose and has a favorable PK/PD profile.

JANUVIA (Sitagliptin) was generally well tolerated.

JANUVIA (Sitagliptin) has broad indication with supporting data.

• Monotherapy

• Initial Combinaion Therapy with Metformin

• Dual Therapy: Add-on to MET / SU / TZD

• Triple Therapy: Add-on to MET + SU / MET + TZD

• Insulin Therapy: Add-on to Ins / Ins + MET

PK=pharmacokinetics; MET=metformin; SU=sulphonylurea; TZD=thiazolidinedione; Ins=insulin