Krentz Andrew J, Bailey Clifford J
Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, Southampton, UK.
Drugs. 2005;65(3):385-411. doi: 10.2165/00003495-200565030-00005.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a progressive and complex disorder that is difficult to treat effectively in the long term. The majority of patients are overweight or obese at diagnosis and will be unable to achieve or sustain near normoglycaemia without oral antidiabetic agents; a sizeable proportion of patients will eventually require insulin therapy to maintain long-term glycaemic control, either as monotherapy or in conjunction with oral antidiabetic therapy. The frequent need for escalating therapy is held to reflect progressive loss of islet beta-cell function, usually in the presence of obesity-related insulin resistance. Today's clinicians are presented with an extensive range of oral antidiabetic drugs for type 2 diabetes. The main classes are heterogeneous in their modes of action, safety profiles and tolerability. These main classes include agents that stimulate insulin secretion (sulphonylureas and rapid-acting secretagogues), reduce hepatic glucose production (biguanides), delay digestion and absorption of intestinal carbohydrate (alpha-glucosidase inhibitors) or improve insulin action (thiazolidinediones). The UKPDS (United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study) demonstrated the benefits of intensified glycaemic control on microvascular complications in newly diagnosed patients with type 2 diabetes. However, the picture was less clearcut with regard to macrovascular disease, with neither sulphonylureas nor insulin significantly reducing cardiovascular events. The impact of oral antidiabetic agents on atherosclerosis--beyond expected effects on glycaemic control--is an increasingly important consideration. In the UKPDS, overweight and obese patients randomised to initial monotherapy with metformin experienced significant reductions in myocardial infarction and diabetes-related deaths. Metformin does not promote weight gain and has beneficial effects on several cardiovascular risk factors. Accordingly, metformin is widely regarded as the drug of choice for most patients with type 2 diabetes. Concern about cardiovascular safety of sulphonylureas has largely dissipated with generally reassuring results from clinical trials, including the UKPDS. Encouragingly, the recent Steno-2 Study showed that intensive target-driven, multifactorial approach to management, based around a sulphonylurea, reduced the risk of both micro- and macrovascular complications in high-risk patients. Theoretical advantages of selectively targeting postprandial hyperglycaemia require confirmation in clinical trials of drugs with preferential effects on this facet of hyperglycaemia are currently in progress. The insulin-sensitising thiazolidinedione class of antidiabetic agents has potentially advantageous effects on multiple components of the metabolic syndrome; the results of clinical trials with cardiovascular endpoints are awaited. The selection of initial monotherapy is based on a clinical and biochemical assessment of the patient, safety considerations being paramount. In some circumstances, for example pregnancy or severe hepatic or renal impairment, insulin may be the treatment of choice when nonpharmacological measures prove inadequate. Insulin is also required for metabolic decompensation, that is, incipient or actual diabetic ketoacidosis, or non-ketotic hyperosmolar hyperglycaemia. Certain comorbidities, for example presentation with myocardial infarction during other acute intercurrent illness, may make insulin the best option. Oral antidiabetic agents should be initiated at a low dose and titrated up according to glycaemic response, as judged by measurement of glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) concentration, supplemented in some patients by self monitoring of capillary blood glucose. The average glucose-lowering effect of the major classes of oral antidiabetic agents is broadly similar (averaging a 1-2% reduction in HbA1c), alpha-glucosidase inhibitors being rather less effective. Tailoring the treatment to the individual patient is an important principle. Doses are gradually titrated up according to response. However, the maximal glucose-lowering action for sulphonylureas is usually attained at appreciably lower doses (approximately 50%) than the manufacturers' recommended daily maximum. Combinations of certain agents, for example a secretagogue plus a biguanide or a thiazolidinedione, are logical and widely used, and combination preparations are now available in some countries. While the benefits of metformin added to a sulphonylurea were initially less favourable in the UKPDS, longer-term data have allayed concern. When considering long-term therapy, issues such as tolerability and convenience are important additional considerations. Neither sulphonylureas nor biguanides are able to appreciably alter the rate of progression of hyperglycaemia in patients with type 2 diabetes. Preliminary data suggesting that thiazolidinediones may provide better long-term glycaemic stability are currently being tested in clinical trials; current evidence, while encouraging, is not conclusive. Delayed progression from glucose intolerance to type 2 diabetes in high-risk individuals with glucose intolerance has been demonstrated with troglitazone, metformin and acarbose. However, intensive lifestyle intervention can be more effective than drug therapy, at least in the setting of interventional clinical trials. No antidiabetic drugs are presently licensed for use in prediabetic individuals.
2型糖尿病是一种渐进性的复杂疾病,长期有效治疗难度较大。大多数患者在确诊时超重或肥胖,若无口服降糖药,将无法实现或维持接近正常的血糖水平;相当一部分患者最终需要胰岛素治疗来维持长期血糖控制,可单独使用胰岛素,也可与口服降糖药联合使用。频繁需要升级治疗被认为反映了胰岛β细胞功能的渐进性丧失,通常是在存在与肥胖相关的胰岛素抵抗的情况下。如今,临床医生面对的是种类繁多的用于2型糖尿病的口服降糖药。这些主要类别在作用方式、安全性和耐受性方面各不相同。这些主要类别包括刺激胰岛素分泌的药物(磺脲类和速效促分泌剂)、减少肝脏葡萄糖生成的药物(双胍类)、延缓肠道碳水化合物消化和吸收的药物(α-葡萄糖苷酶抑制剂)或改善胰岛素作用的药物(噻唑烷二酮类)。英国前瞻性糖尿病研究(UKPDS)证明了强化血糖控制对新诊断的2型糖尿病患者微血管并发症的益处。然而,关于大血管疾病的情况则不太明确,磺脲类药物和胰岛素都没有显著降低心血管事件的发生率。口服降糖药对动脉粥样硬化的影响——超出了对血糖控制的预期效果——正成为一个越来越重要的考虑因素。在UKPDS中,随机接受二甲双胍初始单药治疗的超重和肥胖患者,心肌梗死和糖尿病相关死亡显著减少。二甲双胍不会促进体重增加,对多种心血管危险因素有有益作用。因此,二甲双胍被广泛认为是大多数2型糖尿病患者的首选药物。对磺脲类药物心血管安全性的担忧在很大程度上已经消除,包括UKPDS在内的临床试验结果总体上令人放心。令人鼓舞的是,最近的斯滕诺-2研究表明,基于磺脲类药物的强化目标驱动的多因素管理方法,降低了高危患者微血管和大血管并发症的风险。选择性针对餐后高血糖的理论优势需要在对高血糖这一方面有优先作用的药物的临床试验中得到证实,目前相关试验正在进行。胰岛素增敏剂噻唑烷二酮类降糖药对代谢综合征的多个组成部分可能具有潜在的有利作用;等待心血管终点临床试验的结果。初始单药治疗的选择基于对患者的临床和生化评估,安全性考虑至关重要。在某些情况下,例如妊娠或严重肝肾功能损害,当非药物措施证明不足时,胰岛素可能是首选治疗方法。代谢失代偿,即初期或实际的糖尿病酮症酸中毒或非酮症高渗性高血糖症,也需要使用胰岛素。某些合并症,例如在其他急性并发疾病期间发生心肌梗死,可能使胰岛素成为最佳选择。口服降糖药应从小剂量开始,根据糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)浓度测定所判断的血糖反应进行滴定上调,在一些患者中可通过自我监测毛细血管血糖进行补充。主要类别口服降糖药的平均降糖效果大致相似(平均使HbA1c降低1-2%),α-葡萄糖苷酶抑制剂的效果相对较差。根据个体患者情况调整治疗是一个重要原则。剂量根据反应逐渐滴定上调。然而,磺脲类药物通常在明显低于制造商推荐的每日最大剂量(约50%)时达到最大降糖作用。某些药物的联合使用,例如促分泌剂加双胍类或噻唑烷二酮类,是合理且广泛使用的,现在一些国家已有联合制剂。虽然在UKPDS中,磺脲类药物加用二甲双胍的益处最初不太明显,但长期数据已消除了担忧。在考虑长期治疗时,耐受性和便利性等问题是重要的额外考虑因素。磺脲类药物和双胍类药物都无法显著改变2型糖尿病患者高血糖的进展速度。初步数据表明噻唑烷二酮类药物可能提供更好的长期血糖稳定性,目前正在临床试验中进行测试;目前的证据虽然令人鼓舞,但尚无定论。曲格列酮、二甲双胍和阿卡波糖已被证明可延缓高危糖耐量异常个体从糖耐量异常进展为2型糖尿病。然而,强化生活方式干预可能比药物治疗更有效,至少在干预性临床试验中是这样。目前尚无抗糖尿病药物被批准用于糖尿病前期个体。