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Audio-Digest FoundationFamily Practice


Volume 56, Issue 20
May 28, 2008

The following is an abstracted summary, not a verbatim transcript, of the lectures/discussions on this audio program. If, after reviewing this written summary, you would like to hear the contents and/or earn CME/CE credit:

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ADVANCES IN DIABETES CARE




Educational Objectives

The goal of this program is to improve the management of type 2 diabetes. After hearing and assimilating this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. Diagnose type 2 diabetes and prescribe initial therapy.
2. Explain the role of incretins in normal physiologic blood glucose control.
3. Discuss the use of newer agents such as exenatide and sitagliptin.
4. Select appropriate combination therapy for optimal blood glucose control.
5. Describe newer approaches to diabetes control, such as incretin therapy and endocannabinoids.

Faculty Disclosure

In adherence to ACCME Standards for Commercial Support, Audio-Digest requires all faculty and members of the planning committee to disclose relevant financial relationships within the past 12 months that might create any personal conflicts of interest. Any identified conflicts were resolved to ensure that this educational activity promotes quality in health care and not a proprietary business or commercial interest. For this program, the following has been disclosed: Dr. Leahy is a consultant and on the Speakers’ Bureaus for Merck and Sanofi-Aventis. Dr. Prescott and the planning committee reported nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgments


Dr. Leahy spoke in South Burlington, VT, at the 33rd Annual Family Medicine Review Course, presented June 5-8, 2007, by the University of Vermont College of Medicine. Dr. Prescott was recorded in Napa, CA, at Clinical Pharmacology 2007: Drug Therapy Management, presented April 27-29, 2007, by the University of California, Davis, Health System. The Audio-Digest Foundation thanks the speakers and the sponsors for their cooperation in the production of this program.


APPROACH TO MANAGING TYPE 2 DIABETES John L. Leahy, MD, Professor, Department of Medicine, and Chief, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, University of Vermont College of Medicine; and Director, Regional Diabetes Center and Attending Physician at Medicine Health Care Service, Fletcher Allen Health Care/University of Vermont, Burlington
Diabetes in United States: statistics worsening; nearly 21 million Americans have diabetes, 40 million have prediabetes, and 60 million have metabolic syndrome
Standards of care: updated every January by American Diabetes Association; based on proven outcomes; hemoglobin (Hb) A1C <7.0%; systolic blood pressure (BP) <130 mm Hg; low-density lipoprotein (LDL) <100 mg/dL; triglycerides <150 mg/dL; in patients with type 2 diabetes, studies show that LDL of 70 mg/dL better than 100 mg/dL for primary prevention of cardiac disease and stroke; in patients with no preexisting vascular disease, LDL <100 mg/dL acceptable (many require statin therapy); in patients with history of, eg, myocardial infarction (MI), coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), angioplasty, transient ischemic attack (TIA), or peripheral vascular disease, increase dose of statin to further decrease LDL; use sufficient dosage to attain lipid goals (eg, 10 mg of atorvastatin [Lipitor] probably insufficient in many patients); use of combination therapy increasing; study found BP control affects microvascular and macrovascular complications
Drugs and glucose control: drugs available to target β-cell dysfunction, excess glucose production by liver, and insulin resistance (ie, problem of glucose uptake by skeletal muscle); drugs that slow carbohydrate absorption from gut; many drugs available, but Hb A1C control still difficult; no perfect drug; in average patient, drugs reduce Hb A1C by 1.0% to 1.5%; barriers to glucose control—progressive nature of disease (failure may be due to biologic reason, rather than patient compliance); decision to use insulin (most patients eventually require insulin); treatment inertia by patients (“don’t give me another drug, I’m already on 10 drugs”) or physicians (“if I put my patient on insulin, I’m going to ruin their life”); insurance systems and high cost
International consensus statement: published August 2006; diagnosis of type 2 diabetes—fasting blood glucose (FBG) 126 mg/dL (confirmed by repeating test); oral glucose tolerance testing; random blood glucose (BG) of 200 mg/dL with symptoms (eg, polyuria, polydipsia, unexplained weight loss); after diagnosis, patient should be started on lifestyle modification and metformin (chance of reaching and maintaining goal with lifestyle modification alone poor)
A Diabetes Outcome Progression Trial (ADOPT): patients with recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes given sulfonylurea (glyburide), metformin, or thiazolidinedione (TZD; rosiglitazone [Avandia]) as initial therapy; 4-yr study (extended to 5 yr in some patients); Hb A1C <7% used as secondary outcome; FBG >180 mg/dL used as primary outcome (“I don’t think any of us would ever think of that as a true clinical parameter for failure of therapy”); based on secondary outcome data, metformin started to deviate, with more failure at 4 yr; no significant difference between metformin and TZD; based on primary outcome data, study concluded that TZD superior to metformin; speaker suggests TZD or metformin may be used as first drug; study saw higher failure rate in patients who received sulfonylurea (based on study, difficult to support use of sulfonylurea as first drug)
Additional therapy: for patients not reaching goal of Hb A1C <7%, can add TZD (no hypoglycemia), sulfonylurea (least expensive), or basal insulin (most effective); mix and match therapies to reach goal; if patient on 2 drugs (eg, sulfonylurea and metformin), adding third drug (eg, TZD) likely to lower Hb A1C 1.0% to 1.5%; if patient on therapy and Hb A1C >8.5%, consider insulin therapy
Normal physiologic BG control: with ingestion of food, “not a lot happens to blood sugars” due to increase in insulin and decrease in glucagon (patients with type 2 diabetes [postprandial hyperglycemia] have loss of insulin response [ie, β- cell dysfunction], and failure to decrease glucagon); incretins—gut-derived hormones secreted in response to nutrient ingestion; potentiate insulin response to meal; rise in insulin not due to increase in glucose; signal β cells; glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP); glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1; newer agent)
Studies about incretin effect: 1) oral or intravenous (IV) glucose given to patients without diabetes; effects of oral and IV glucose identical, but insulin response 3-fold higher with oral glucose (incretin effect; stimulus for insulin response to meal); 2) patients with glucose intolerance given meal and infused with GLP-1; postprandial hyperglycemia controlled profoundly and glucagon turned off
Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4): after eating, GLP-1 and GIP enter vascular system; DPP-4 metabolizes and inactivates GLP-1 and GIP in 1 to 2 min
Summary of glucose homeostasis: healthy people—food ingested; gut receives signal from brain to release GLP-1 and GIP to improve insulin secretion and to turn off glucagon secretion, with downstream effects of preventing liver from “being a factory for glucose” and causing food to be taken up in target tissues; results in small change in glucose after meals; patients with type 2 diabetes—compared to IV glucose, ability of oral glucose to potentiate response attenuated (ie, GLP-1 not secreted in normal way); type 2 diabetes “is somewhat a disease of GLP-1 deficiency”; study measured BG every hour from 10:00 PM to 4:00 PM ; in patients with type 2 diabetes, infusion of GLP-1 shown to normalize BG within 2 hr and remained normal all night
Approaches to incretin therapy: IV GLP-1 must be infused continuously (impractical); 1) give drug that looks like GLP-1 or binds to GLP-1 receptors, but can be used practically, ie, not metabolized quickly like native GLP-1; exenatide (Byetta; injected) currently available; 2) develop drugs that inhibit activity of DPP-4; sitagliptin (Januvia; taken orally) currently on market
Exenatide: on market since June 2005; naturally occurring peptide that occurs in saliva of Gila monsters; subcutaneous (SC) injections bid; original indications—can be used with metformin, or sulfonylurea, or both (more recently, used with TZD); in 30-wk trials of patients with Hb A1C levels of 8.5%, exenatide lowered Hb A1C levels by 1% (regardless of background drug); patients interested in drug because of 1) sustainability of effect on Hb A1C and 2) weight loss (with side effect of nausea); study showed 100-kg patients lost 5 to 6 kg after 2 yr
Sitagliptin: efficacy in lowering Hb A1C similar to exenatide; indicated to be used only with metformin or TZD (not with combination of two); no weight loss; once-daily oral dosing; standard dose (100 mg/day) must be reduced for patients with renal dysfunction; if creatinine clearance <50 mL/min, give 50 mg/day (if <30 mL/min, give 25 mg/day); no side effects or problems with hypoglycemia; weight neutrality, not weight loss
Insulin therapy: 3 rapid-acting insulin analogues available (appear more physiologically correct, compared to regular insulin); long-acting insulin analogues include insulin glargine (Lantus) and insulin detemir (Levemir); pulmonary insulin—complicated therapy; no longer on market; starting insulin therapy—start with 1 insulin injection/day in combination with oral agents; insulin glargine vs insulin suspension, isophane (NPH)—once-daily insulin glargine compared to bedtime NPH and oral agents; both excellent at improving Hb A1C (8.6% to 6.9%); no difference in efficacy between insulin glargine and NPH; insulin glargine may be slightly safer (ie, less middle-of-night lows); effective basal insulin therapy—do not stop drugs (eg, sulfonylurea or secretagogue); stopping secretagogue lowers chance for Hb A1C control; give sufficient amount of insulin (average dose for NPH or insulin glargine, 45-50 U/day; instruct patients about adjusting dose by 1 U/day until BG reaches 110-115 mg/dL); when basal insulin not enough—address postmeal BG control; many patients do well with 1 injection of prandial insulin at largest meal, along with basal insulin
Summary of step therapy: 1) diet, exercise, and metformin; 2) drug therapy; 3) address FBG with basal insulin; 4) 1 injection of short-acting insulin at dinnertime; if ineffective, use 2 injections; eventually use full basal-bolus regimen (not required by every patient); prandial insulin—use rapid-acting analogues; start with small dose (4 U) and adjust weekly to reach bedtime BG of <130 mg/dL
DRUGS FOR TREATING DIABETES Pamela T. Prescott, MD, MPH, Professor, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Clinical Nutrition, and Vascular Medicine, and Director, Student Programs, University of California, Davis, School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA
High glucose levels: abnormal; elevated levels lasting 10 to 20 yr cause remarkable cardiovascular, central nervous system (CNS), gastrointestinal (GI), and muscle changes and abnormalities; greater reductions in glucose levels require greater number of drugs (eg, reducing patient’s Hb A1C from 10% to 8% may require 1 drug, reducing Hb A1C to 6% may require 4 drugs and insulin); with each additional drug, cost and complications increase, and interactions between drugs become more complex
Glucose modulation: involves liver and muscles; control of abnormalities involves pancreas, fat cells, and brain; fat cells—leptin signals brain to “turn off so we stop eating”; ghrelin produced in stomach and helps with satiety; adiponectin produced in fat cells (decreases appetite; increases muscle sensitivity for better glucose uptake; affects GI tract); pancreas and fat cells signal CNS to recognize and respond to hormones so that glucose levels decrease
Treatment goals: stabilize β cells to prevent development of type 2 diabetes; reduce insulin resistance; increase insulin secretion; maintain effects; increase β cells (in 80%-95% of patients with type 2 diabetes, insulin secretion stops because β cells die)
Lifestyle modifications: diet and exercise effective, but effects plateau over time; study found metformin not as effective as diet and exercise in preventing diabetes (as single agent, lifestyle modification did better); obese patients—decrease fat mass; give medications to decrease obesity and progression of diabetes; thin patients—Asians and South Pacific Islanders (eg, Fijians) have problems with β cells; therapies that increase insulin secretion (eg, TZDs, metformin, secretagogues) ineffective
Newer medications: incretins—help pancreas to be better conductor for glucose; limit effect of fat cells on glucose levels; endocannabinoids—help brain; at start of meal, brain sends out hormonal messages to pancreas to stimulate insulin secretion and to fat cells to take up or release glucose; whether obese or thin, patients with type 2 diabetes have same problem with signaling between pancreas and brain, and between fat cells and brain; helpful for broader group of patients
Glucagon: made in β cells; in type 2 diabetes, mismanagement and miscommunication between insulin and glucagon (signal to decrease glucagon when glucose ingested dysfunctional; adds to ineffectiveness of insulin); over time, excess glucagon decreases amount of insulin that can be secreted
Incretin effect: at start of meal, food hits stomach and hormones (ie, incretins) released, signaling pancreas to increase insulin production; GLP-1—only incretin available for therapy; compared to oral glucose, IV glucose does not cause as rapid rise in insulin; GLP-1 may help maintain insulin secretion over time and may slow steady decline and death of pancreatic β cells; slows absorption of food and stomach emptying; affects brain, decreases glucose production by liver, and may increase insulin sensitivity; may keep brain on task to “tell us when finished eating”; incretins cleared through system rapidly (2 min; even more rapid with defects in DPP); exenatide resistant to effects of DPP and remains in system longer (several hours); sitagliptin blocks effects of DPP to keep GLP available longer
Exenatide: lowers glucose; increases insulin secretion; decreases glucagon; causes weight loss (5-15 lb); effect appears continuous (United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study [UKPDS] showed that over time, every other agent [eg, metformin, insulin] stopped working); can be used as single agent, but currently marketed for combination use; can be used in combination with metformin or sulfonylureas; ongoing studies with TZDs (not yet approved by Food and Drug Administration to be used with TZDs or insulin); given SC bid; half-life long enough to bridge middle meal; start with 5 µg bid and increase over time
Cannabinoid receptors: in hypothalamus, increase appetite; in limbus, increase motivation to eat and to smoke tobacco; in adipose tissue, increase release of adiponectin from fat cells; in stomach, increase absorption and decrease in peptides; in skeletal muscle, slow absorption of glucose; effects of blocking receptors—decreased appetite; increased adiponectin (released from fat cells; decreases insulin resistance when absent; in diabetes, adiponectin decreased); in muscle, increased glucose uptake; in liver, decreased lipogenesis; in GI tract and brain, increased satiety; weight loss; increased high-density lipoprotein (HDL); decreased triglycerides; improved metabolic syndrome
Pramlintide (Symlin): can be added when patient unresponsive to insulin; synthetic amylin; amylin cosecreted with insulin in pancreas; over time, amylin secretion lost; involved in modulation of how quickly food passes through stomach; used to slow absorption of food; marketed for weight loss; may decrease appetite

Suggested Reading

American Diabetes Association: Standards of medical care in diabetes. Diabetes Care 28 Suppl 1:S4, 2005; Crotty S et al: The new insulins. Pediatr Emerg Care 23:903, 2007; Edelman SV: Does addition of pramlintide to basal insulin improve glycemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus? Nat Clin Pract Endocrinol Metab 4:194, 2008; Hoogwerf BJ: Exenatide and pramlintide: new glucose-lowering agents for treating diabetes mellitus. Cleve Clin J Med 73:477, 2006; Kahn SE et al: Glycemic durability of rosiglitazone, metformin, or glyburide monotherapy. N Engl J Med 355:2427, 2006; Mack GS: Pfizer dumps Exubera. Nat Biotechnol 25:1331, 2007; Monnier L et al: Contributions of fasting and postprandial plasma glucose increments to the overall diurnal hyperglycemia of type 2 diabetic patients: variations with increasing levels of HbA(1c). Diabetes Care 26:881, 2003; Nathan DM et al: Management of hyperglycemia in type 2 diabetes: A consensus algorithm for the initiation and adjustment of therapy: a consensus statement from the American Diabetes Association and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes. Diabetes Care 29:1963, 2006; Nauck MA et al: Effects of subcutaneous glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1 [7-36 amide]) in patients with NIDDM. Diabetologia 39:1546, 1996; Nauck MA et al: Incretin effects of increasing glucose loads in man calculated from venous insulin and C-peptide responses. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 63:492, 1986; Rachman J et al: Near-normalisation of diurnal glucose concentrations by continuous administration of glucagon- like peptide-1 (GLP-1) in subjects with NIDDM. Diabetologia 40:205, 1997; Siminerio LM: Approaches to help people with diabetes overcome barriers for improved health outcomes. Diabetes Educ 34 Suppl 1:18S, 2008; Yale JF et al: The effect of a thiazolidinedione drug, troglitazone, on glycemia in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus poorly controlled with sulfonylurea and metformin. A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Ann Intern Med 134:737, 2001.

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