糖尿病中的吸入式胰岛素。

Inhaled insulin in diabetes mellitus.

作者信息

Royle P, Waugh N, McAuley L, McIntyre L, Thomas S

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2004(3):CD003890. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003890.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Insulin therapy often relies on multiple daily injections of insulin. However this is a considerable burden to many people with diabetes and adherence to such an insulin regimen can be difficult to maintain, hence compromising optimal glycaemic control. Also, short acting injected insulin is absorbed more slowly than insulin released by the normal pancreas in response to a meal. Inhaled insulin has the potential to reduce the number of injections to perhaps one long-acting insulin per day, and provide a closer match to the natural state, by more rapid absorption from the lung.

OBJECTIVES

To compare the efficacy, adverse effects and patient acceptability of inhaled versus injected insulin.

SEARCH STRATEGY

A sensitive search strategy for randomised controlled or cross-over trials was combined with key terms for inhaled insulins. Databases searched were: The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, PubMed, EMBASE, Science Citation Index, BIOSIS, Web of Science Proceedings, National Research Register UK, Current Controlled Trials, ClinicalTrials.gov, Conference Papers Index, LexisNexis, and web sites of the ADA and EASD were searched for recent meeting abstracts. Reference lists and journals were handsearched. There were no language restrictions on searching. Manufacturers of inhaled insulin were also contacted. Date of last search October 2002.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Only randomised controlled trials with parallel groups or controlled cross-over trials, including type 1 or type 2 diabetic patients of any age treated with insulin, were considered eligible. The minimum trial duration considered was 10 weeks, as this is the time taken for glycated haemoglobin to reliably reflect changes in glycaemic control.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Trial selection and evaluation of study quality was performed independently by two reviewers. The quality of reporting of each trial was assessed according to a modification of the criteria outlined in Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (CRD) Report 4, Spitzer; and Jadad.

MAIN RESULTS

Six randomised controlled trials were found and the overall number of participants was 1191. Three trials included patients with type 1 diabetes and three with type 2 diabetes. Three trials had a duration of 24 weeks, and three of 12 weeks. All were open label. There was insufficient information to determine the study quality. Results for HbA1c were similar for all trials, in that all showed comparable glycaemic control for inhaled insulin compared to an entirely subcutaneous regimen. All trials that reported patient satisfaction and quality of life showed that these were significantly greater in the inhaled insulin group. Overall there was no difference in total hypoglycaemic episodes between the groups, but one trial showed a statistically significant increase in severe hypoglycaemic episodes for the inhaled insulin group. No adverse pulmonary effects were observed in any of the studies, but longer follow-up will be required to be sure that there are no adverse side-effects. Cavets include: few studies published in full (so quality could not be assessed), and only two studies used the same basal regimen in both the inhaled and injected groups.

REVIEWERS' CONCLUSIONS: Inhaled insulin taken before meals, in conjunction with an injected basal insulin, has been shown to maintain glycaemic control comparable to that of patients taking multiple daily injections. The key benefit appears to be that patient satisfaction and quality of life are significantly improved, presumably due to the reduced number of daily injections required. However, the patient satisfaction data is based on five trials, of which only two have been published in full; also the three trials containing quality of life data are all only published in abstract form at present. In addition, longer term pulmonary safety data are still needed. Also, the lower bioavailability, and hence higher doses of inhaled insulin required, may make it less cost-effective than injected insulin.

摘要

背景

胰岛素治疗通常依赖于每日多次注射胰岛素。然而,这对许多糖尿病患者来说是一个相当大的负担,而且坚持这样的胰岛素治疗方案可能难以维持,从而影响最佳血糖控制。此外,短效注射胰岛素的吸收比正常胰腺在进食后释放的胰岛素更慢。吸入式胰岛素有可能将注射次数减少至可能每天一次长效胰岛素,并通过从肺部更快吸收,更接近自然状态。

目的

比较吸入式胰岛素与注射式胰岛素的疗效、不良反应及患者可接受性。

检索策略

将针对随机对照试验或交叉试验的敏感检索策略与吸入式胰岛素的关键词相结合。检索的数据库包括:考克兰图书馆、医学索引数据库、医学期刊数据库、荷兰医学文摘数据库、科学引文索引、生物学文摘数据库、科学网会议录、英国国家研究注册库、当前对照试验库、临床试验.gov、会议论文索引、律商联讯,还检索了美国糖尿病协会和欧洲糖尿病研究协会网站上近期会议摘要。对手工检索参考文献列表和期刊。检索无语言限制。还联系了吸入式胰岛素制造商。最后检索日期为2002年十月。

入选标准

仅纳入具有平行组的随机对照试验或对照交叉试验,包括接受胰岛素治疗的任何年龄的1型或2型糖尿病患者。考虑的最短试验持续时间为10周,因为糖化血红蛋白需要这段时间才能可靠反映血糖控制的变化。

数据收集与分析

由两名评价员独立进行试验选择和研究质量评估。根据对考克兰系统评价组(CRD)报告4、斯皮策报告及贾达德报告中概述的标准进行修改后,评估每个试验的报告质量。

主要结果

共找到6项随机对照试验,参与者总数为1191人。3项试验纳入1型糖尿病患者,3项纳入2型糖尿病患者。3项试验持续24周,3项持续12周。所有试验均为开放标签试验。确定研究质量的信息不足。所有试验中糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)的结果相似,即与完全皮下注射方案相比,吸入式胰岛素在血糖控制方面表现相当。所有报告患者满意度和生活质量的试验表明,吸入式胰岛素组的这些指标显著更高。总体而言,两组之间低血糖发作总数无差异,但一项试验显示吸入式胰岛素组严重低血糖发作有统计学显著增加。在任何研究中均未观察到不良肺部影响,但需要更长时间的随访以确保无不良副作用。注意事项包括:发表的完整研究很少(因此无法评估质量),且仅两项研究在吸入组和注射组中使用相同的基础治疗方案。

评价员结论

饭前吸入胰岛素并联合注射基础胰岛素已被证明能维持与每日多次注射胰岛素患者相当的血糖控制。主要益处似乎是患者满意度和生活质量显著提高可能是由于所需的每日注射次数减少。然而,患者满意度数据基于5项试验,其中仅2项已全文发表;此外,包含生活质量数据的3项试验目前均仅以摘要形式发表。此外,仍需要长期肺部安全性数据。而且,吸入式胰岛素较低的生物利用度以及因此所需的更高剂量,可能使其性价比低于注射式胰岛素。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索