Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2021 Sep 27;11(9):e046912. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046912.
For people with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) who require an antidiabetic drug as an add-on to metformin, there is controversy about whether newer drug classes such as dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP4i) or sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) reduce the risk of long-term complications compared with sulfonylureas (SU). There is widespread variation across National Health Service Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) in drug choice for second-line treatment in part because National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines do not specify a single preferred drug class, either overall or within specific patient subgroups. This study will evaluate the relative effectiveness of the three most common second-line treatments in the UK (SU, DPP4i and SGLT2i as add-ons to metformin) and help target treatments according to individual risk profiles.
The study includes people with T2DM prescribed one of the second-line treatments-of-interest between 2014 and 2020 within the UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink linked with Hospital Episode Statistics and Office of National Statistics. We will use an instrumental variable (IV) method to estimate short-term and long-term relative effectiveness of second-line treatments according to individuals' risk profiles. This method minimises bias from unmeasured confounders by exploiting the natural variation in second-line prescribing across CCGs as an IV for the choice of prescribed treatment. The primary outcome to assess short-term effectiveness will be change in haemoglobin A1c (%) 12 months after treatment initiation. Outcome measures to assess longer-term effectiveness (maximum ~6 years) will include microvascular and macrovascular complications, all-cause mortality and hospital admissions during follow-up.
This study was approved by the Independent Scientific Advisory Committee (20-064) and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Research Ethics Committee (21395). Results, codelists and other analysis code will be made available to patients, clinicians, policy-makers and researchers.
对于需要在二甲双胍基础上加用降糖药物的 2 型糖尿病(T2DM)患者,关于新型降糖药物(如二肽基肽酶-4 抑制剂[DPP4i]或钠-葡萄糖共转运蛋白-2 抑制剂[SGLT2i])与磺酰脲类药物(SU)相比是否能降低长期并发症风险,尚存争议。由于英国国家卫生与保健优化研究所(NICE)指南并未明确总体或特定患者亚组中首选的单一药物类别,因此各国民健康服务临床委托组(CCG)在二线治疗药物选择方面存在广泛差异。本研究将评估英国最常用的三种二线治疗药物(SU、DPP4i 和 SGLT2i,均作为二甲双胍的附加药物)的相对疗效,并根据个体风险概况来靶向治疗。
该研究纳入了 2014 年至 2020 年期间在英国临床实践研究数据链接(CPRD)中被处方二线治疗药物的 T2DM 患者,同时与医院入院统计和英国国家统计局(ONS)数据链接。我们将使用工具变量(IV)方法,根据个体的风险概况,评估二线治疗的短期和长期相对疗效。该方法通过利用 CCG 之间二线药物处方的自然变化作为处方治疗选择的 IV,最小化了未测量混杂因素引起的偏倚。评估短期疗效的主要结局指标将是治疗起始后 12 个月时血红蛋白 A1c(%)的变化。评估长期疗效(最长约 6 年)的指标将包括微血管和大血管并发症、全因死亡率和随访期间的住院情况。
本研究已获得独立科学咨询委员会(20-064)和伦敦卫生与热带医学学院伦理委员会(21395)的批准。研究结果、代码清单和其他分析代码将提供给患者、临床医生、决策者和研究人员。