Kirkman M Sue, Shankar R Ravi, Shankar Sudha, Shen Changyu, Brizendine Edward, Baron Alain, McGill Janet
Indiana University School of Medicine, 545 Barnhill Dr., EH 421, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
Diabetes Care. 2006 Sep;29(9):2095-101. doi: 10.2337/dc06-0061.
Postprandial hyperglycemia characterizes early type 2 diabetes. We investigated whether ameliorating postprandial hyperglycemia with acarbose would prevent or delay progression of diabetes, defined as progression to frank fasting hyperglycemia, in subjects with early diabetes (fasting plasma glucose [FPG] <140 mg/dl and 2-h plasma glucose > or =200 mg/dl).
Two hundred nineteen subjects with early diabetes were randomly assigned to 100 mg acarbose t.i.d. or identical placebo and followed for 5 years or until they reached the primary outcome (two consecutive quarterly FPG measurements of > or =140 mg/dl). Secondary outcomes included measures of glycemia (meal tolerance tests, HbA(1c), annual oral glucose tolerance tests [OGTTs]), measures of insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment [HOMA] of insulin resistance and insulin sensitivity index from hyperglycemic clamps), and secondary measures of beta-cell function (HOMA-beta, early- and late-phase insulin secretion, and proinsulin-to-insulin ratio).
Acarbose significantly reduced postprandial hyperglycemia. However, there was no difference in the cumulative rate of frank fasting hyperglycemia (29% with acarbose and 34% with placebo; P = 0.65 for survival analysis). There were no significant differences between groups in OGTT values, measures of insulin resistance, or secondary measures of beta-cell function. In a post hoc analysis of subjects with initial FPG <126 mg/dl, acarbose reduced the rate of development of FPG > or =126 mg/dl (27 vs. 50%; P = 0.04).
Ameliorating postprandial hyperglycemia did not appear to delay progression of early type 2 diabetes. Factors other than postprandial hyperglycemia may be greater determinants of progression of diabetes. Alternatively, once FPG exceeds 126 mg/dl, beta-cell failure may no longer be remediable.
餐后高血糖是早期2型糖尿病的特征。我们研究了使用阿卡波糖改善餐后高血糖是否能预防或延缓糖尿病的进展,糖尿病进展定义为发展为明显的空腹高血糖,研究对象为患有早期糖尿病(空腹血糖[FPG]<140mg/dl且餐后2小时血糖≥200mg/dl)的患者。
219名患有早期糖尿病的受试者被随机分配至服用100mg阿卡波糖每日三次或服用相同安慰剂组,并随访5年或直至达到主要终点(连续两个季度FPG测量值≥140mg/dl)。次要终点包括血糖测量指标(进餐耐量试验、糖化血红蛋白[HbA(1c)]、年度口服葡萄糖耐量试验[OGTT])、胰岛素抵抗测量指标(胰岛素抵抗的稳态模型评估[HOMA]以及高血糖钳夹试验的胰岛素敏感性指数),以及β细胞功能的次要测量指标(HOMA-β、早期和晚期胰岛素分泌以及胰岛素原与胰岛素比值)。
阿卡波糖显著降低了餐后高血糖。然而,明显空腹高血糖的累积发生率并无差异(阿卡波糖组为29%,安慰剂组为34%;生存分析P=0.65)。两组在OGTT值、胰岛素抵抗测量指标或β细胞功能次要测量指标方面均无显著差异。在对初始FPG<126mg/dl的受试者进行的事后分析中,阿卡波糖降低了FPG≥126mg/dl的发生率(27%对50%;P=0.04)。
改善餐后高血糖似乎并未延缓早期2型糖尿病的进展。餐后高血糖以外的因素可能是糖尿病进展的更大决定因素。或者,一旦FPG超过126mg/dl,β细胞功能衰竭可能不再可逆。