Charbonnel Bernard, Schweizer Anja, Dejager Sylvie
Department of Endocrinology, University of Nantes, Hopital Laënnec, Nantes, France.
Hosp Pract (1995). 2013 Apr;41(2):93-107. doi: 10.3810/hp.2013.04.1059.
As type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) progresses, most patients will require insulin replacement therapy. Whether oral antidiabetic drug (OAD) therapy should be retained when initiating insulin is still debated. While the rationale to keep metformin with insulin is strong (mostly as an insulin-sparing agent to limit weight gain), the evidence is less clear for other OADs. In particular, the question now comes up what the expected benefit could be of combining the newer agents, such as the dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors with insulin. Additionally, when metformin is no longer a treatment option, as in the case of patients with severe renal impairment, insulin is often used as monotherapy, with little evidence of benefit in maintaining other OADs. In this specific situation, it is also of interest to evaluate the potential benefit of combined treatment with a DPP-4 inhibitor and insulin. Among the classic limitations of insulin therapy in patients with T2DM, hypoglycemia remains a major barrier to glycemic control, along with weight gain exacerbation. The oral DPP-4 inhibitors improve glycemic control by increasing the sensitivity of the islet cells to glucose, and thus are not associated with an increased risk for hypoglycemia and are weight neutral. In addition to the expected benefits associated with limiting insulin dose and regimen complexity, the specific advantages the DPP-4 inhibitor drug class on hypoglycemia and weight gain could justify combining DPP-4 inhibitors with insulin; additionally, a DPP-4 inhibitor may be of special value to decrease glycemic excursions that are not properly addressed by basal insulin therapy and metformin use, even after optimizing titration of the basal insulin. However, given the common original perception that treatment with DPP-4 inhibitors may be less beneficial with increasing disease progression because of the loss of β-cell function, the potential relevance of these agents in the setting of advanced T2DM treated with insulin was not necessarily anticipated. Promising data from studies on the use of these new agents in insulin-treated patients with T2DM have started to emerge. Our article provides a comprehensive overview of the currently available evidence from controlled randomized clinical trials and we discuss the potential role of DPP-4 inhibitors in the this setting. Further clinical experience will allow to fully assess the positioning of these agents in insulin-treated T2DM populations.
随着2型糖尿病(T2DM)病情进展,大多数患者将需要胰岛素替代治疗。开始使用胰岛素时是否应保留口服抗糖尿病药物(OAD)治疗仍存在争议。虽然继续使用二甲双胍联合胰岛素的理由很充分(主要作为一种胰岛素节省剂以限制体重增加),但对于其他OADs而言,证据尚不明确。特别是,现在出现了一个问题,即联合使用新型药物(如二肽基肽酶-4(DPP-4)抑制剂)与胰岛素的预期益处可能是什么。此外,当二甲双胍不再是一种治疗选择时,如在严重肾功能损害患者中,胰岛素常作为单一疗法使用,几乎没有证据表明保留其他OADs有益。在这种特定情况下,评估DPP-4抑制剂与胰岛素联合治疗的潜在益处也很有意义。在T2DM患者胰岛素治疗的经典局限性中,低血糖仍然是血糖控制的主要障碍,体重增加加剧也是如此。口服DPP-4抑制剂通过提高胰岛细胞对葡萄糖的敏感性来改善血糖控制,因此与低血糖风险增加无关且对体重无影响。除了在限制胰岛素剂量和治疗方案复杂性方面的预期益处外,DPP-4抑制剂类药物在低血糖和体重增加方面的特定优势可能证明将DPP-4抑制剂与胰岛素联合使用是合理的;此外,即使在优化基础胰岛素滴定后,DPP-4抑制剂对于减少基础胰岛素治疗和二甲双胍使用无法妥善处理的血糖波动可能具有特殊价值。然而,鉴于人们普遍认为随着疾病进展,由于β细胞功能丧失,使用DPP-4抑制剂治疗可能益处减少,这些药物在接受胰岛素治疗的晚期T2DM患者中的潜在相关性不一定能被预见到。关于在接受胰岛素治疗的T2DM患者中使用这些新型药物的研究已开始出现有前景的数据。我们的文章全面概述了来自对照随机临床试验的现有证据,并讨论了DPP-4抑制剂在这种情况下的潜在作用。进一步的临床经验将有助于全面评估这些药物在接受胰岛素治疗的T2DM人群中的定位。