new medicines for type 2 diabetes when do you use them. masharani-=diabetes lecture... · [1 unit...
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5/22/2015
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New medicines for type 2 diabetes – when do you use them
1. Oral Secretagogues (e.g. sulfonylureas)
2. Metformin
3. Alpha glucosidase inhibitors
4. Thiazolidinediones
5. GLP-1 receptor agonists
6. DPP-4 inhibitors
7. Pramlintide
8. SGLT2 inhibitors
9. Insulin
10. (Bromocriptine; colesevelam)
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Management of Hyperglycemia in Type 2 Diabetes, 2015: A Patient- Centered Approach Update to a Position Statement of the American Diabetes Association and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes Inzucchi et al. Diabetes Care 2015;38:140–149
ADA/EASD algorithm 2015
6 classes of drugs: Metformin GLP1 receptor agonists/DPP 4 inhibitors Sulfonylureas (+other secretagogues) Pioglitazone SGLT2 inhibitors Insulin
metformin
Metformin
+ another
Metformin
+ 2 others
More complex
insulin regimens
In making therapeutic decision take into account efficacy; hypoglycemia risk; effect on weight; major side effects; cost
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Glycemic targets
• Younger patients with short duration of diabetes - aiming for an HbA1c of < 7% will reduce the risk of both microvascular and macrovascular complications (aim for 6% if it can be done safely)
• T2D patients who can easily achieve an HbA1c of < 7% with lifestyle +/- pharmacotherapy do not need to “raise” their HbA1c
• Patients with history of severe hypoglycemia & advanced atherosclerosis should not aim for < 7%
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• Children
ages 0-6 <8.5%
6-12 <8%
13-19 <7.5%
• Elderly with limited life expectancy <8%
• Pregnancy 6 % (NICE <6.1%)
GLP-1 receptor agonists
Exenatide (Byetta) (2005)
Pens – 5 & 10mcg
Inject SC twice daily. Do not use for GFR < 30
Exenatide LAR (Bydureon)
2mg powder Resuspend in diluent and inject SC weekly
Liraglutide (Victoza) (2010)
Pen – 0.6, 1.2 and 1.8 mg
Usually 1.2 mg SC daily
Albiglutide (Tanzeum) (2014)
Pen - 30 mg Inject SC weekly
Dulaglutide (Trulicity) (2014)
Pen – 0.75, 1.5 mg Usually inject 0.75 mg SC weekly
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DPP 4 inhibitors
Sitagliptin (Januvia) (2006)
25, 50, 100 mg 100 mg daily usual dose. Use 50 mg for GFR 30-50; 25 mg for < 30
Saxagliptin (Onglyza) (2009)
2.5, 5 mg 5 mg daily usual dose. Use 2.5 mg if GFR< 50 or if taking strong CYP/3A4 inhibitors
Linagliptin (Tradjenta) (2011)
5 mg 5 mg daily
Alogliptin (Nesina) (2013)
6.25,12.5,25 mg 25 mg daily usual dose. Use 12.5 mg for GFR 30-60; 6.25 mg for < 30
SGLT2 inhibitors
Canagliflozin (Invokana) (2013)
100 mg, 300 mg 100 mg daily usual dose. Can use 300 for additional glucose lowering
Dapagliflozin (Farxiga) (2014)
5, 10 mg 10 mg daily usual dose. Use 5 mg if liver disease
Empagliflozin (Jardiance) (2014)
10,25 mg 10 mg daily usual dose. Can use 25 for additional glucose lowering
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Insulins
U300 insulin glargine (Toujeo) (2015)
1.5 ml Pen Duration of action at least 24 hrs
Technosphere insulin (Afrezza) (2014)
4 and 8 unit cartridges
Peak levels in 12 to 15 minutes; duration 3 hours
GLP1 receptor agonists and DPP4 inhibitors
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-0.9
-0.8
-0.7
-0.6
-0.5
-0.4
-0.3
-0.2
-0.1
0
0.1
0.2
-3
-2.5
-2
-1.5
-1
-0.5
0
Placebo
5 mcg
10 mcg
% HbA1c lowering
Effect of exenatide therapy for 30 wks on glycemic control and
weight loss in metformin treated type 2 patients
DeFronzo et al. Diabetes 28:1092; 2005
Weight loss (kg)
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Exenatide promotes weight loss when added to
diet and exercise in obese nondiabetic subjects
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
Exenatide Placebo
Total (73)
Nausea (18)
No Nausea (55)
Rosenstock et al. Diabetes Care 33: 1173 (2010)
Kg
* Liraglutide 3 mg daily approved for weight loss
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GLP-1
receptor
agonists
DPP-4
inhibitors
HbA1c
lowering with
monotherapy
0.5 to 1.5 % 0.4 to 0.8%
Weight Decreased Neutral
These drugs have glucose dependent insulin release and have low risk
for hypoglycemia
GLP-1 receptor agonists : adverse events
Placebo Exenatide
(n= 483) (963)
Nausea 18 % 44 %
Vomiting 4 13
Diarrhea 6 13
Feeling jittery 4 9
Dizziness 6 9
Headache 6 9
Dyspepsia 3 6
Hypoglycemia risk increased if on sulfonylurea
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Caution using GLP-1 receptor agonists in patients with renal impairment
FDA: 16 cases of renal kidney impairment and 62 cases of acute kidney injury in patients taking exenatide
- preexisting kidney disease
- one or more risk factors for kidney disease.
- nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea - possible that these side effects caused volume depletion and renal injury.
DPP4 inhibitors: adverse events
• Nasopharyngitis; upper respiratory infections
• Allergic reactions – angioedema, anaphylaxis,
exfoliative dermatologic reactions
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Cases of pancreatitis during clinical trials with GLP-1
receptor agonists
Experimental drug
Comparator group (placebo; other meds; insulin)
Exenatide 8 2
Liraglutide 13 1
Albiglutide 6 2
Dulaglutide 5 1
1.4-2.2 vs 0.6-0.9 cases of pancreatitis per 1000 patient years
FDA reporting mechanism 30 cases of acute pancreatitis with exenatide
No cases of pancreatitis reported during clinical trials with sitagliptin and saxagliptin. FDA adverse reporting mechanism 2009 – 88 cases of acute pancreatitis in patients on sitagliptin In one study with linagliptin, 8 cases of pancreatitis in 4687 patients exposed to drug (4311 patient yrs) & no cases in 1183 patients on placebo (433 patient yrs). With alogliptin there were 11 cases in 5902 patients exposed to drug (0.2%) and 5 cases in 5183 on comparator drugs (<0.1%)
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Used 10ug of exenatide in rats ~ 70 times the
clinical dose for 75 days *
Pancreatic acinar inflammation and pyknosis
The rats had 30% reduction in weight
In human islet amyloid polypeptide transgenic
rats, sitagliptin (200 mg/kg ~ 140 times clinical
dose) increased pancreatic ductal turnover,
metaplasia and induced pancreatitis in one rat
**
*Nachnani et al. Diabetologia 53: 153 (2010)
**Matveyenko et al. Diabetes 58: 1604 (2009)
Acinar
cells Dedifferentiated
cells
Pancreatic
adenocarcinoma
Endocrine cells
Cellular plasticity within the pancreas – the potential for fully
differentiated cells to change fate
Puri & Hebrok Dev Cell 18:342 (2010)
Acinar
injury
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Rats given GLP1 receptor agonists developed C- cell tumors Avoid if family or personal history of MTC; MEN 2
Differences between the GLP1 receptor agonists
• GI symptoms less with weekly treatment
• Weight loss slightly greater with liraglutide
• ~ 6% of patients on exenatide develop antibodies that attenuate glycemic response
• Albiglutide has less weight loss than exenatide and liraglutide
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Differences between the DPP4 Inhibitors
• Linagliptin- no dose adjustment for renal or liver disease
• Sitagliptin/saxagliptin/alogliptin adjust dose if renal disease
• Adjust saxgliptin dose if a strong CYP3A4/5 inhibitor is prescribed
Postmarketing study with Saxagliptin – 16, 492 T2D randomized to Saxagliptin or Placebo. Mean followup 2.1 years 289, 3.5% on Saxagliptin vs 228, 2.8% on placebo admitted to hospital for heart failure (P=0.007)
Scirica et al Circ. 130:1579 (2014)
Alogliptin 106 admission for heart failu (3.1%) vs Placebo 89 (2.9%) NS
(5380 patients, median followup 18 months)
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SGLT2 inhibitors
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SGLT 2 inhibitors lower threshold for glycosuria to 70 to 90 mg/dl
100 mg canagliflozin lowers fasting and postprandial glucose
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Reduces threshold for glycosuria to 70 to 90 mg/dl Improves fasting and postprandial glucose levels Lowers HbA1c by 0.6 to 1 % Give 100 mg daily and if necessary 300 mg daily Weight lost ~ 5 to 10lbs; decreases systolic BP; raises HDL and LDL chol Side effects – Vaginal yeast infection (~10.4%); UTI (~ 6%); dehydration Do not use if GFR < 45 mL/min; lower dose if < 60 mL/min
Canagliflozin (Invokana)
Differences between the SGLT2 inhibitors
• Inducers of UDP-glucuronosyltransferase enzymes (e.g. rifampin, phenytoin, phenobarbital, ritonavir) increase metabolism of canagliflozin
• Dapagliflozin- higher rates of breast cancer and bladder cancer in clinical trials
• Canaglifozin & empagliflozin – do not use if eGFR < 45
• Dapagliflozin- do no use if eGFR < 60
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Insulins
36 hr euglycemic clamp in T1D patients after 8 days of daily injections
of insulin glargine – U100 or U300
Becker et al. Diabetes Care 38: 637 (2015)
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T1D – 0.2 units/Kg
(from FDA.gov)
Results from open label clinical trials with U300 insulin glargine
In the two type 1 studies – control was the same and no difference in overall hypoglycemia rates In the six type 2 studies – control was the same; 2 of 6 studies had less hypoglycemia (glucose 70 or less; or needed help to treat low) Higher doses of U300 were required compared to U100 to achieve glycemic targets (~ 11 to 18% more insulin units)
Rosselli et al J Pharm Tech 2015
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Fumaryl diketopiperazine is an excipient that forms 2-2.5µm crystal (technosphere
particle) that provide a large surface area for adsorption of regular insulin
Angelo et al J Diab Sci Tech 3:545 (2009)
Insulin levels after inhaled insulin vs SC insulin analog
Time to maximal glucose infusion rate : 53 mins inhaled insulin; 108 mins SC analog
(back to baseline 3 hr with inhaled insulin; 4 hr with SC analog)
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Technosphere insulin - Afrezza
From: Sanofi Afrezza prescribing insert
4 unit cartridge – 0.35 mg insulin
~ 39% of dose distributed to lungs;
t ½ clearance from lung epithelium
~ 1hr
[1 unit SC insulin ~0.04 mg insulin]
In clinical trials, inhaled insulin boluses + SC basal insulin
as effective as SC insulin analogs + SC basal insulin (or a little worse)
Inhaled insulin use was associated with less symptomatic &
severe hypoglycemia (e.g. severe events 8.05 vs 14.45 per 100
subject-months in T1D)
FDA briefing document
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~ 40 mL decline in FEV1 in first 3 months which persisted for 2 years of
follow-up
FDA briefing document
Spirometry before prescribing, at 6 months and then annually
Cough most common side effect (~27%)
Bronchospasm in patients with asthma, COPD
Not recommended for active smokers or recent ex-smokers
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Inhaled insulin Comparator
Exubera clinical trial data *
6/4740 patients 1/4292 patients
FUSE (followup study of exubera trial subjects ) 2536 subjects (34%) **
18 primary lung cancers (6 deaths)
5 primary lung cancers (2 deaths)
Technosphere insulin ***
2/2750 patient yrs 0/2169 patient yrs
* All in previous cigarette smokers
** Primary lung cancer rates with Exubera 1.07/1000 patient years;
Comparator 0.29/1000 patient years
*** both ex smokers; and 2 cases of squamous cell lung cancers
in nonsmokers after completion of trials
Lung cancer and inhaled insulin
Clinical cases
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ADA/EASD algorithm 2015
6 classes of drugs:
Metformin
GLP1 receptor agonists/DPP 4 inhibitors
Sulfonylureas (+other secretagogues)
Pioglitazone
SGLT2 inhibitors
Insulin
metformin
Metformin
+ another
Metformin
+ 2 others
More complex
insulin regimens
In making therapeutic decision take into account efficacy; hypoglycemia risk;
effect on weight; major side effects; cost
Decisions based on
Efficacy – DPP4 moderate; others high
Hypoglycemia risk – oral secretagogues and insulin have high risk
Effect on weight – metformin, DPP4 neutral; GLP1 receptor agonists, SGLT2
inhibitors promote weight loss; oral secretagogues, insulin,
pioglitazone cause weight gain
Major side effects – metformin lactic acidosis
pioglitazone fractures; fluid retention, possib. bladder CA
GLP1 receptor agonists nausea, vomiting, possibly pancreatitis
DPP4 may cause pancreatitis
SGLT inhibitors – UTI; genital mycotic infections; dehydration
Cost – all except metformin and oral secretagogues are expensive
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Randomized controlled study of gastric banding vs lifestyle weight loss
in 60 obese patients (BMI 30 to 40) with DM < 2 years
Dixon et al. JAMA 299: 316 (2008)
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Case 1
UCSF 2013 – 66 yr old Caucasian man with DM 10 yrs. BMI 39.5 (290lb). On
metformin for 5yrs. Stopped and on insulin. 50 units of glargine; 20 to 30
units insulin aspart premeals (total insulin ~ 125 units daily).
Peripheral neuropathy; nephropathy with urine albumin 3.1 g/g creatinine .
Normal creatinine. HbA1c 8.1 %
Started metformin + 40 insulin glargine; 15 to 20 insulin aspart premeals.
HbA1c ~ 6.7%. Weight loss ~ 4 lbs.
Exenatide initiated 6 months ago
I month ago – taking 60 units of insulin a day; exenatide 10 mcg twice a day;
Metformin XR 1000 daily. HbA1c 6.2 %. Weight 280 lbs. Urine albumin
1.4 g/g creatinine
Suggested stop insulin and start glimepiride
Case 2
UCSF 2013. 63 yr old Caucasian man with DM since his late 40s. Oral
agents until age 60 when placed on insulin pump. Has proliferative retinopathy;
peripheral neuropathy with toe amputation; PVD with fem-pop bypass; MI history;
left nephrectomy for renal CA – creatinine 2.0. Admitted to UCSF with MRSA
bacteremia with septic shock; epidural abscess. Patient before acute illness
weighed 220 lbs – after hospitalization weighed 175 lbs. Excellent control
on insulin – HbA1c 7.1%
Oct. 2014 -- regained weight – 218 lbs; quite sedentary. HbA1c 10%. Creat 1.78
Negative antibodies for type 1 diabetes. Quite insulin resistant.
Started sitagliptin 25 mg daily
Jan 2015 – HbA1c 8.9%. Add glipizide 5 mg BID
April 2015 – HbA1c 8 %
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Case 3
54 yr old Caucasian man with DM for 10 years. No complications. BMI 27.5
On metformin, glimepiride, insulin detemir (40 Units). Intolerant of GLP-1 receptor
agonists. HbA1c 7.7%
Started on Canagliflozin 300 mg daily
2 months later – BG low 100’s; HbA1c 6.7 %; insulin detemir dose reduced.
No polyuria. No infections
Case 4
84 year old woman with DM for 12 yrs. BMI 41
On metformin 1000 bid, glimepiride 4 mg/day
HbA1c 8.5 %. Fingerstix glucose high 100’s to low 200’s
Would prefer pills to injections
Canagliflozin 100 mg daily
1 week later called complain of vulvar itching and rash
Canagliflozin stopped; yeast infection treated
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A cautionary case: SGLT2 inhibitor use in type 1 diabetes
23 year old Caucasian woman with T1D since age 8 – on injections
HbA1c around 8 %
Started on Canagliflozin Sept 2014
Glucose levels dropped and so insulin doses were gradually decreased
Insulin glargine dose reduced 30 to 10 to 8 to 2; also significant decrease
in bolus insulin doses
Admitted to hospital with nausea, vomiting, dehydration and ketoacidosis
A case of needle phobia
Diabetes clinic 2012. 53 yr old Vietnamese woman with diabetes
since age 37. BMI 18. Initially treated as type 2 diabetes. HbA1c 8-12
GAD antibody +ve
Refused to inject insulin even though she agreed that the needles
were almost painless (refused to use syringes or pens)
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Given Novofine autocover needles
Now on basal bolus insulin regimen (4 injections a day)
HbA1c 6.9 to 7.4 %
Dulaglutide pen – you cannot see
the needle
Wolpert Diab Care 2008
Stacking can be an issue for T1D patients who are on pumps and sensors
and inhaled insulin would reduce the risk of hypoglycemia
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Costs for 1 month supply (standard doses; Walgreens, Costco)
Metformin (4 ); glipizide (5); repaglinide (50)
Pioglitazone (12)
Acarbose (48)
DPP4 inhibitors ( ~ 330 )
SGLT2 inhibitors ( ~ 370)
GLP1 receptor agonists (~500)
Analog insulins ( ~ 400)
Old insulins ( ~ 150)
Make your own toolkit
Metformin
Oral secretagogues – glipizide,
glimepiride, nateglinide, repaglinide
DPP4 inhibitors – sitagliptin
GLP-1 receptor agonists – exenatide,
liraglutide
Insulins – glargine U100, aspart, lispro,
some premixed; NPH, Regular
( an SGLT2 inhibitor in the future?)