Clinical efficacy of new thiazolidinediones and glinides in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus

M Füchtenbusch, E Standl… - Experimental and clinical …, 2000 - thieme-connect.com
M Füchtenbusch, E Standl, H Schatz
Experimental and clinical endocrinology & diabetes, 2000thieme-connect.com
A central finding of the UKPDS was that in type 2 diabetic patients, tight glycemic control with
HbA1c targets as close to the normal range as possible must be achieved to further reduce
diabetes related-complications,-mortality, and-cardiovascular disease, highlighting the need
for new, optimized treatment strategies. With a focus on clinical efficacy, this paper discusses
the results from the 20 major therapeutical trials published in the years 1997-1999, that
evaluated the new insulinsensitizing thiazolidinediones Rosiglitazone and Pioglitazone and …
Summary
A central finding of the UKPDS was that in type 2 diabetic patients, tight glycemic control with HbA1c targets as close to the normal range as possible must be achieved to further reduce diabetes related-complications,-mortality, and-cardiovascular disease, highlighting the need for new, optimized treatment strategies. With a focus on clinical efficacy, this paper discusses the results from the 20 major therapeutical trials published in the years 1997-1999, that evaluated the new insulinsensitizing thiazolidinediones Rosiglitazone and Pioglitazone and the new insulin-releasing potassium channel blockers Repaglinide and Nateglinide. While for Nateglinide, promising, but only preliminary data is available at current, Rosiglitazone, Pioglitazone, and Repaglinide have been shown appropriate for both mono-and combination therapy with current standard drug treatment of type 2 diabetes. Similar to the known, older antidiabetic drugs, the new agents discussed have comparable blood glucose lowering potentials with a dose-related capacity of 0.5 to 1.5% HbA1c reduction. These beneficial effects were both seen in drug-naive patients previously treated with diet only and in combination therapies where patients had previous antidiabetic standard drug treatment suggesting effectiveness of glitazones and glinides also in more advanced stages of the disease. Problems with adverse effects appeared minor although longe-range implications of weight gain, edema, lowering of hemoglobin, increase of total cholesterol for the glitazones, and hypoglycemia for glinides warrant further consideration. What becomes clear from the variety of most recent mono-and combination treatment studies with as much as five different classes of antidiabetic drugs is that individually tailored therapies that recognize quality of life parameters and target the predominant features of metabolic pathology (such as early postprandial versus fasting hyperglycemia, degree of insulin resistance, progressive loss of β-cell function) may become a feasible goal in the future.
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