Edelman Steven V, Weyer C
Veterans Affairs Health Care Systems, V111G Endocrinology, University of California-San Diego, 3350 La Jolla Village Drive, San Diego, CA 92161, USA.
Diabetes Technol Ther. 2002;4(2):175-89. doi: 10.1089/15209150260007390.
Current insulin therapy still fails to safely restore near-normoglycemia in the majority of patients. Among the barriers to achieving tight long-term glycemic control with insulin in both type 1 and type 2 diabetes are an increased risk of hypoglycemia, undesired weight gain, and a failure to normalize postprandial hyperglycemia and excessive unpredictable diurnal glucose fluctuations. Amylin is a second beta-cell hormone that is cosecreted with insulin in response to meals, and is deficient in patients with type 1 and insulin-requiring type 2 diabetes. Preclinical studies indicate that amylin acts as a neuroendocrine hormone that complements the effects of insulin in postprandial glucose regulation by suppressing postprandial glucagon secretion and slowing the rate of nutrient delivery from the stomach to the small intestine. Human amylin is not optimal for replacement therapy because of its propensity to aggregate; thus, pramlintide, a soluble, nonaggregating synthetic peptide analog of human amylin, was developed that has potency at least equal to that of human amylin. In clinical studies, subcutaneous injections of pramlintide prior to meals, in addition to insulin therapy, significantly reduced postprandial glucose excursions and lowered HbA(1c) levels in patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The improvement in long-term glycemic control was associated with a significant reduction in body weight and occurred without increases in total daily insulin use or in overall severe hypoglycemia event rates. Because of this unique spectrum of clinical effects, amylin replacement with pramlintide as an adjunctive therapy to insulin is a promising approach that may fulfill some of the unmet clinical needs of insulin-using patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
目前的胰岛素治疗仍无法使大多数患者安全恢复接近正常的血糖水平。在1型和2型糖尿病患者中,使用胰岛素实现长期严格血糖控制存在诸多障碍,包括低血糖风险增加、不必要的体重增加,以及餐后高血糖未能正常化和日间血糖过度不可预测的波动。胰淀素是一种与胰岛素共同分泌的β细胞激素,在进食时分泌,1型糖尿病患者和需要胰岛素治疗的2型糖尿病患者体内缺乏这种激素。临床前研究表明,胰淀素作为一种神经内分泌激素,通过抑制餐后胰高血糖素分泌和减缓营养物质从胃到小肠的输送速度,在餐后血糖调节中补充胰岛素的作用。由于人胰淀素易于聚集,因此它并非替代治疗的理想选择;于是,开发了普兰林肽,一种可溶性、不聚集的人胰淀素合成肽类似物,其效力至少与人胰淀素相当。在临床研究中,1型和2型糖尿病患者在胰岛素治疗基础上,于餐前皮下注射普兰林肽,可显著减少餐后血糖波动,并降低糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)水平。长期血糖控制的改善与体重显著减轻相关,且每日胰岛素总用量和严重低血糖事件总体发生率均未增加。由于这种独特的临床效应谱,将普兰林肽作为胰岛素的辅助治疗进行胰淀素替代是一种有前景的方法,可能满足1型和2型糖尿病胰岛素治疗患者一些未满足的临床需求。