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DM management Dr.Duaa Hiasat.

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Presentation on theme: "DM management Dr.Duaa Hiasat."— Presentation transcript:

1 DM management Dr.Duaa Hiasat

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3 ORAL HYPOGLYCEMIC AGENT

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6 New Recommendation: Pharmacologic Therapy For T2DM
In patients with long-standing suboptimally controlled type 2 diabetes and established atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, empagliflozin or liraglutide should be considered as they have been shown to reduce cardiovascular and all-cause mortality when added to standard care. Ongoing studies are investigating the cardiovascular benefits of other agents in these drug classes. B One final point about the selection of blood glucose lowering agents in people with type 2 diabetes. Based on the results of two large clinical trials, a recommendation was added in 2017 to consider empagliflozin or liraglutide in patients with established cardiovascular disease to reduce the risk of mortality. [SLIDE] American Diabetes Association Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes. Approaches to glycemic treatment. Diabetes Care 2017; 40 (Suppl. 1): S64-S74 References American Diabetes Association. Standards of medical care in diabetes—2014. Diabetes Care 2014;37(suppl 1):S27 Inzucchi SE, Bergenstal RM, Buse JB, et al.; American Diabetes Association (ADA); European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD). Management of hyperglycemia in type 2 diabetes: a patient-centered approach. Position Statement of the American Diabetes Association (ADA) and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD). Diabetes Care 2012;35:1364–1379 6

7 METFORMIN Preferred initial agent for T2DM • Advantages
One of most potent at reducing A1c 1-2% Weight neutral or weight loss of kg Little risk of hypoglycemia with monotherapy Decreases CV events and mortality Meta-analysis showed no CV harm with possible benefit vs. placebo Diabetes, Obesity Metabolism May be useful for pre-DM

8 Advantages (cont.) – 1-2xd dosing – May have a positive effect on osteoblast – Generic – Low cost ~$4/month • Disadvantages – GI side effects, start low with low dose – Lactic acidosis risk? • Multiple cautions & contraindications • Assess renal & liver function

9 SULFONYLUREAS • Stimulate insulin secretion – requires residual ß-cell function 2nd generation greater potency & efficacy • 66-70% initially respond 5-10%/y failure rate Islet cell “burnout” Noncompliance Disease progression Often need additional agents

10 Advantages One of most potent at lowering A1c 1-2% Many years of use Low GI 1xd dosing Low cost ~$4/month CKD –Glipizide (Glucotrol) no dosage change, • Glimepiride (Amaryl) lower dose • Disadvantages – May induce ß-cell failure – “tolerance” develops – Increases insulin release

11 Disadvantages (cont.) Hypoglycemia > with elderly & renal/hepatic dysfunction, missed meals > with Glyburide Weight gain of kg in 1st year is common Due to hyperinsulinemia Contributes to insulin resistance & drug failure Avoid Glyburide (Micronase) in renal dysfunction FDA warning about increased risk of CV death? Hypersensitivity – sulfa

12 MEGLITINIDES • Repaglinide (Prandin), Nateglinide (Starlix)
• Reduce A1c • Advantages – Rapid onset and duration of insulin release – ¯ PPG • Dose with meals – no meal then no dose – Safer than some SUs with CKD • eGFR < 30 start Repaglinide 0.5 mg or Nateglinide 60 mg • Disadvantages – Hypoglycemia, weight gain – Frequent dosing with meals – Higher cost than SUs, > $100/month

13 Thiazolidinediones (TZDs, Glitazones) Pioglitazone (Actos), Rosiglitazone (Avandia) Reduce A1c 0.5-2% • Advantages – Improve insulin sensitivity & preserve ß-cell • No tolerance? – No hypoglycemia – Pioglitazone reduces lipids and CV? – Pioglitazone CKD – no dose change – Used in preDM – 1xd dosing

14 TZDs/Glitazones Disadvantages
• ­ weight (~5kg) by activation of adipose tissue • Fluid retention – Edema – CHF – contraindicated in NYHA III or IV Possible increased MI risk with rosiglitazone?? Bladder cancer with pioglitazone Negative effect on bone with 2x risk of fractures FDA Med Watch March 2007. Moderate to high cost

15 α-GLUCOSIDASE INHIBITORS
• Acarbose (Precose),Miglitol (Glyset) • Reduce A1c 0.5-1% • Advantages – No weight gain, No hypoglycemia – Slows glucose absorption& reduces PPG – Used for pre-DM – May reduce CV events – Moderate cost –generic • Disadvantages – GI side effects are common – 3xd dosing – Caution with GI diseases – Caution in CKD with eGFR <25-30

16 INCRETIN-BASED THERAPY
• GLP-1 receptor agonists – Incretin mimetics“tides” – Exenatide (Byetta), Exenatide ER (Bydureon) – Liraglutide (Victoza), Albiglutide (Tanzeum) • Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP-4Is) – “gliptins” – Linagliptin (Tradjenta) – Sitagliptin (Januvia) – Saxagliptin (Onglyza) – Alogliptin (Nesina)

17 INCRETIN-BASED THERAPY
• Incretins normally released after meals by intestine Rapidly inactivated by dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) • Incretin mimetics – GLP1 agonists: – Increases insulin when PG is high (glucose-dependent) – Decreases glucagon secretion (glucose-dependent) – Slows gastric emptying – Promotes satiety with decreased food intake • DPP-4 inhibitors – Inhibits break down of incretins – Prolongs incretin survival

18 Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP-4 Inhibitors
Prolongs duration of endogensous incretin action Decrease A1c 0.5-1% “apparently are similar with regard to efficacy and tolerability”

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21 Possible pancreatitis and pre-cancerous findings from incretin mimetics
• Postmarketing reports of acute pancreatitis associated with incretin mimetics – previously reported Unpublished findings – Increased risk of pancreatitis and pre-cancerous cellular changes (pancreatic duct metaplasia) • FDA not reached any conclusions Will obtain and evaluate new information • “patients should continue to take their medicine as directed until they talk to their health care professional, and health care professionals … follow the prescribing recommendations in the drug labels.”

22 AMYLIN MIMETICS • Pramlintide (Symlin) • Reduce A1c by 0.5-1
• Advantages – Weight loss – No hypoglycemia with monotherapy – Decrease PPG • Disadvantages – SC injection – GI SIDE EFFECT – 3xd dosing – Hypoglycemia with insulin FDA warning – Not recommended GFR < 30 – High cost

23 SGLT2 INHIBITORS • Canagliflozin (Invokana), Dapagliflozin (Farxiga)
• Novel mechanism of action - inhibits SGLT2 – Inhibit ~30-50% of filtered glucose – Increases urinary glucose excretion to ~ 80 g/d • Increasing dose after 50% inhibition does not increase – Dose-dependent decrease in FPG and PPG – Reduces A1c % Agents dependent on ß-cell and/or peripheral insulin resistance – May see decreased activity over time as DM progression occurs • Action not dependent on ß-cell or peripheral insulin sensitivity – May continue to be effective over time

24 SGLT2 INHIBITORS • Advantages – Weight loss of ~2-4.7 kg – No hypoglycemia in monotherapy . – Reduces FPG and PPG • Decreases total glucose vs. time area under the curve – May be as effective as metformin in monotherapy – Decreases SBP ~2-10 mmHg & DBP ~ – Canagliflozin 1xd before bkfst; Dapagliflozin 1xd anytime

25 SGLT2 INHIBITORS • Disadvantages – Polyuria, frequency – caution orthostasis in elderly – Genital yeast infections ~3-8% (OR vs. comparators) – UTIs – ~0.3-2% (OR ~1.3 vs. comparators) – Don’t use: Canagliflozin GFR < 45, Dapagliflozin GFR < 60 – Bladder cancer with dapagliflozin? – Hyperkalemia – ACEIs/ARBs, K-sparing diuretics – Hypermagnesemia, hyperphosphatemia – High cost ~$290/month

26 BILE ACID SEQUESTRANTS
• Colesevalam (Welchol) • Reduce A1c by ~0.5-1% • Advantages – Weight neutral – No hypoglycemia – Decrease LDL – May be safe CKD • Disadvantages – GI – Increase TG – DDI with adsorption – High cost ~$330/month

27 References ADA Care.DiabetesJournals.org


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