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Reduced daily risk of glycemic variability: comparison of exenatide with insulin glargine.

Author(s): McCall AL, Cox DJ, Brodows R, Crean J, Johns D, Kovatchev B

Affiliation(s): University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908, USA. alm3j@virginia.edu

Publication date & source: 2009-06, Diabetes Technol Ther., 11(6):339-44.

Publication type: Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

BACKGROUND: Conventional methods describing daily glycemic variability (i.e., standard deviation and coefficient of variation) do not express risk. Low and High Blood Glucose Indices (LBGI and HBGI, respectively) and Average Daily Risk Range (ADRR) are parameters derived from self-monitored blood glucose (SMBG) data that quantify risk of glycemic excursions and temporal aspects of variability. In the present study, variability parameters were used to assess effects of exenatide and insulin glargine on risk of acute blood glucose extremes. METHODS: New (LBGI, HBGI, and ADRR) and conventional variability analyses were applied retrospectively to SMBG data from patients with type 2 diabetes suboptimally controlled with metformin and a sulfonylurea plus exenatide or insulin glargine as a next therapeutic step. Exenatide- (n = 282) and insulin glargine-treated (n = 267) patients were well matched. RESULTs: Exenatide treatment reduced ADRR overall (exenatide, mean +/- SEM, 16.33 +/- 0.45; insulin glargine, 18.54 +/- 0.49; P = 0.001). Seventy-seven percent of exenatide-treated patients were at low risk for glucose variability compared with 62% of glargine-treated patients (P = 0.00023). LBGI for exenatide remained minimal for all categories and significantly lower than glargine for all comparisons, and HBGI for exenatide remained low or moderate for all categories and significantly lower than glargine after the morning and evening meals. Reduced variability in exenatide-treated patients was shown by conventional methods but provided no indications of risk. CONCLUSIONS: Average glycemic control was similar for both treatment groups. However, exenatide treatment minimized risk for glycemic variability and extremes to a greater degree than insulin glargine treatment.

Page last updated: 2009-10-20

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