Donnelly L A, Doney A S F, Hattersley A T, Morris A D, Pearson E R
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK.
Diabet Med. 2006 Feb;23(2):128-33. doi: 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2005.01755.x.
In treating Type 2 diabetes (T2DM), UK guidelines recommend metformin in obese and overweight patients, and either sulphonylureas or metformin in normal weight patients. Although other factors influence prescribing choice, a key objective in treating T2DM is to lower plasma glucose. There is little data on how glycaemic response to oral agents varies with body mass index (BMI). Therefore, we assessed current prescribing practice and effect of BMI on glycaemic response to sulphonylureas and metformin in a large population T2DM cohort.
BMI was determined in 3856 T2DM patients on sulphonylurea or metformin monotherapy in 2001-2002. Patients were identified from the Diabetes Audit and Research in Tayside, Scotland (DARTS) database. In a linear regression, the effect of BMI and other confounders on drug response was assessed in 2064 treatment-naïve patients commencing sulphonylureas or metformin between 1994 and 2002.
In 2001-2002, metformin was more likely to be used in obese than non-obese patients: 13% normal weight, 33.6% overweight and 62.1% obese patients were treated with metformin. Glycaemic response to sulphonylureas was not influenced by BMI (P = 0.81). Metformin was more effective in lowering glucose in those with a lower BMI (r = -0.02, P = 0.02), although the clinical impact of this was small. The HbA(1c) reduction in non-obese patients was similar to that in obese patients (1.46% vs. 1.34%, P = 0.11).
Glycaemic response to metformin in non-obese and obese patients is similar, suggesting that an individual's BMI should not influence the choice of oral agent. Given the non-glycaemia-related benefits of metformin, it should be used in more non-obese patients than is current practice in Tayside, Scotland.
在治疗2型糖尿病(T2DM)时,英国指南建议肥胖和超重患者使用二甲双胍,正常体重患者使用磺脲类药物或二甲双胍。尽管其他因素会影响处方选择,但治疗T2DM的一个关键目标是降低血糖。关于口服药物的血糖反应如何随体重指数(BMI)变化的数据很少。因此,我们在一个大型T2DM队列中评估了当前的处方实践以及BMI对磺脲类药物和二甲双胍血糖反应的影响。
2001 - 2002年,对3856例接受磺脲类药物或二甲双胍单药治疗的T2DM患者测定BMI。患者来自苏格兰泰赛德地区的糖尿病审计与研究(DARTS)数据库。在一项线性回归分析中,评估了1994年至2002年间开始使用磺脲类药物或二甲双胍的2064例初治患者中,BMI及其他混杂因素对药物反应的影响。
2001 - 2002年,肥胖患者比非肥胖患者更有可能使用二甲双胍:13%的正常体重患者、33.6%的超重患者和62.1%的肥胖患者接受了二甲双胍治疗。磺脲类药物的血糖反应不受BMI影响(P = 0.81)。二甲双胍在BMI较低的患者中降低血糖更有效(r = -0.02,P = 0.02),尽管其临床影响较小。非肥胖患者的糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)降低幅度与肥胖患者相似(1.46%对1.34%,P = 0.11)。
非肥胖和肥胖患者对二甲双胍的血糖反应相似,这表明个体的BMI不应影响口服药物的选择。鉴于二甲双胍与血糖无关的益处,在苏格兰泰赛德地区,应比目前的做法更多地用于非肥胖患者。