Sign up for our complimentary
weekly e-journal

Main Newsletter
Mastery Series
Therapy Series
 
Bookmark and Share | Print Article | Items for the Week Previous | All Articles This Week | Next
This article originally posted 29 June, 2012 and appeared in  MedicationBlood Glucose ControlIssue 632

Hypoglycemia Prevented by New Insulin

An experimental insulin drug prevented low blood sugar among diabetic patients more often than insulins now available....

Advertisement

While treatment with insulin can help control blood sugar, it sometimes leads to abnormally low levels, or hypoglycemia. Symptoms of low blood sugar include headaches, tremors, and even seizures, so it is critical to develop medications that control blood sugar without causing extreme drops.

Lead investigator Daniel Einhorn, M.D., medical director at Scripps Whittier Diabetes Institute, and clinical professor of medicine at the University of California San Diego, mentioned in his presentation that, "Diabetes is an increasingly common disease, and many patients fail to achieve their treatment goals due to a fear of hypoglycemia." "This puts them at risk of developing diabetes complications."

While both medications in this large-scale analysis decreased blood-sugar concentrations, the experimental drug, degludec, caused fewer incidents of low blood sugar, especially at night-time, compared to glargine. Overall, low blood-sugar levels occurred 14 percent less often among degludec patients than among those receiving glargine. At night, low blood sugar occurred 37 percent less often among degludec than glargine recipients.

Sixteen weeks after the study, degludec patients had even fewer incidents of low blood sugar. During this maintenance period, the condition occurred 21 percent less frequently, overall, and 43 percent less often at night. No major complications were reported.

Einhorn said that, "This study suggests that blood glucose can be effectively lowered by degludec, with a lower risk for hypoglycemia compared to currently available insulins." "It is therefore possible that treatment with degludec can improve patient outcomes by limiting the side effects associated with insulin use."

Investigators analyzed data from seven separate clinical trials. Two of these trials focused on type 1 diabetes and the other five trials examined the most common form of diabetes, known as type 2, in which the body both responds inadequately to insulin and produces inadequate amounts of the hormone.

More than 3,000 participants were randomly assigned to receive either degludec or glargine once a day for 26 or 52 weeks. Of the total number, 2,899 patients received degludec, and 1,431 were given glargine. Nearly half of all patients on both drugs achieved targeted levels of blood-sugar control.

The study results were presented at The Endocrine Society's 94th Annual Meeting in Houston, June 2012. 

Advertisement


 

Bookmark and Share | Print | Category | Home

This article originally posted 29 June, 2012 and appeared in  MedicationBlood Glucose ControlIssue 632

Past five issues: Issue 678 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 137 | Issue 677 | SGLT2 Special Edition Issue 2 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 136 |

2013 Most Popular Articles:

AACE Releases New Comprehensive Diabetes Management Algorithm
Posted April 25, 2013
Diabetes Increases Cancer Risk by 20 Percent
Posted May 16, 2013
AACE - New Diabetes Guidelines Based on Tailored Approach
Posted May 09, 2013
AACE: Ralph A. DeFronzo, MD -- Diabetes Prevention Supports More Aggressive and Earlier Intervention
Posted May 09, 2013
Discovery Raises Hope for Type 1 Diabetes Reversal
Posted May 03, 2013
AACE – New Test Efficiently Detects Diabetic Neuropathy
Posted May 09, 2013
Intermittent Fasting May Improve Diabetes and Reduce Cardiovascular Risk
Posted May 03, 2013
How Type 2 Diabetes Develops
Posted May 16, 2013
AACE: CAD Risk for Pre-Diabetes Similar to Diabetes
Posted May 09, 2013
Low-Glycemic Diet Seen to Reverse Diastolic Dysfunction of Diabetes
Posted May 03, 2013

See more most popular…


Browse by Feature Writer & Article Category.
A. Lee Dellon, MD | Aaron I. Vinik, MD, PhD, FCP, MACP | Beverly Price | Charles W Martin, DD | Derek Lowe, PhD | Dr. Bernstein | Dr. Brian Jakes, Jr. | Dr. Fred Pescatore | Dr. Tom Burke, Ph.D | Eric S. Freedland | Evan D. Rosen | Ginger Kanzer-Lewis | Greg Milliger | Kristina Sandstedt | Laura Plunkett | Leonard Lipson, M.A. | Louis H. Philipson | Maria Emanuel Ryan, DDS, PhD | Marilyn Porter, RD, CDE | Melissa Diane Smith | Michael R. Cohen, RPh, MS, ScD, FASHP | Paul Chous, M.A., OD | Philip A. Wood PhD | R. Keith Campbell, Professor, B.Pharm, MBA, CDE | Sheri R. Colberg PhD | Sherri Shafer | Stanley Schwartz, MD, FACP, FACE | Steve Pohlit | Steven V. Edelman, M.D. | Timothy S. Hollingshead |
 
Diabetes In Control Advertisers
 
Cast Your Vote
Should a person newly diagnosed with prediabetes be treated with medication along with lifestyle changes?

Navigate Diabetes In Control



Search Articles On Diabetes In Control