Scheen A J, Lefèbvre P J
Department of Medicine, CHU Sart Tilman, Liège, Belgium.
Drug Saf. 1995 Jan;12(1):32-45. doi: 10.2165/00002018-199512010-00003.
Non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) affects middle-aged or elderly people who frequently have several other concomitant diseases, especially obesity, hypertension, dyslipidaemias, coronary insufficiency, heart failure and arthropathies. Thus, polymedication is the rule in this population, and the risk of drug interactions is important, particularly in elderly patients. The present review is restricted to the interactions of other drugs with antihyperglycaemic compounds, and will not consider the mirror image, i.e. the interactions of antihyperglycaemic agents with other drugs. Oral antihyperglycaemic agents include sulphonylureas, biguanides--essentially metformin since the withdrawn of phenformin and buformin--and alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, acarbose being the only representative on the market. These drugs can be used alone or in combination to obtain better metabolic control, sometimes with insulin. Drug interactions with antihyperglycaemic agents can be divided into pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic interactions. Most pharmacokinetic studies concern sulphonylureas, whose action may be enhanced by numerous other drugs, thus increasing the risk of hypoglycaemia. Such an effect may result essentially from protein binding displacement, inhibition of hepatic metabolism and reduction of renal clearance. Reduction of the hypoglycaemic activity of sulphonylureas due to pharmacokinetic interactions with other drugs appears to be much less frequent. Drug interactions leading to an increase in plasma metformin concentrations, mainly by reducing the renal excretion or the hepatic metabolism of the biguanide, should be avoided to limit the risk of hyperlactaemia. Owing to its mode of action, pharmacokinetic interferences with acarbose are limited to the gastrointestinal tract, but have not been extensively studied yet. Pharmacodynamic interactions are quite numerous and may result in a potentiation of the hypoglycaemic action or, conversely, in a deterioration of blood glucose control. Such interactions may be observed whatever the type of antidiabetic treatment. They result from the intrinsic properties of the coprescribed drug on insulin secretion and action, or on a key step of carbohydrate metabolism. Finally, a combination of 2 to 3 antihyperglycaemic agents is common for treating patients with NIDDM to benefit from the synergistic effect of compounds acting on different sites of carbohydrate metabolism. Possible pharmacokinetic interactions between alpha-glucosidase inhibitors and classical antidiabetic oral agents should be better studied in the diabetic population.
非胰岛素依赖型(2型)糖尿病(NIDDM)影响中年或老年人群,这些人常常伴有其他多种疾病,尤其是肥胖症、高血压、血脂异常、冠状动脉供血不足、心力衰竭和关节病。因此,多种药物联合使用在该人群中很常见,药物相互作用的风险很大,在老年患者中尤为如此。本综述仅限于其他药物与降糖化合物之间的相互作用,不考虑相反的情况,即降糖药物与其他药物之间的相互作用。口服降糖药物包括磺脲类、双胍类(自苯乙双胍和丁双胍退市后主要是二甲双胍)以及α-葡萄糖苷酶抑制剂,阿卡波糖是市场上唯一的代表药物。这些药物可以单独使用或联合使用以获得更好的代谢控制,有时还会联合胰岛素使用。与降糖药物的药物相互作用可分为药代动力学和药效学相互作用。大多数药代动力学研究涉及磺脲类药物,许多其他药物可增强其作用,从而增加低血糖风险。这种效应主要可能源于蛋白结合置换、肝代谢抑制和肾清除率降低。与其他药物的药代动力学相互作用导致磺脲类药物降糖活性降低的情况似乎要少得多。应避免主要通过减少双胍类药物的肾排泄或肝代谢导致血浆二甲双胍浓度升高的药物相互作用,以限制高乳酸血症的风险。由于其作用方式,与阿卡波糖的药代动力学干扰仅限于胃肠道,但尚未进行广泛研究。药效学相互作用相当多,可能导致降糖作用增强,或者相反,导致血糖控制恶化。无论抗糖尿病治疗的类型如何,都可能观察到这种相互作用。它们源于联合使用药物对胰岛素分泌和作用或碳水化合物代谢关键步骤的内在特性。最后,联合使用2至3种降糖药物治疗NIDDM患者很常见,以便从作用于碳水化合物代谢不同部位的化合物的协同效应中获益。α-葡萄糖苷酶抑制剂与经典口服抗糖尿病药物之间可能的药代动力学相互作用在糖尿病患者中应得到更好的研究。