UKPDS
UKPDS
UKPDS
Articles
Summary
Background Improved blood-glucose control decreases
the progression of diabetic microvascular disease, but
the effect on macrovascular complications is unknown.
There is concern that sulphonylureas may increase
cardiovascular mortality in patients with type 2 diabetes
and that high insulin concentrations may enhance
atheroma formation. We compared the effects of intensive
blood-glucose control with either sulphonylurea or insulin
and conventional treatment on the risk of microvascular
and macrovascular complications in patients with type 2
diabetes in a randomised controlled trial.
Methods 3867 newly diagnosed patients with type 2
diabetes, median age 54 years (IQR 4860 years), who
after 3 months diet treatment had a mean of two fasting
plasma glucose (FPG) concentrations of 61150
mmol/L were randomly assigned intensive policy with
a sulphonylurea (chlorpropamide, glibenclamide, or
glipizide) or with insulin, or conventional policy with diet.
The aim in the intensive group was FPG less than 6
mmol/L. In the conventional group, the aim was the best
achievable FPG with diet alone; drugs were added only if
there were hyperglycaemic symptoms or FPG greater than
15 mmol/L. Three aggregate endpoints were used to
assess differences between conventional and intensive
treatment: any diabetes-related endpoint (sudden death,
death from hyperglycaemia or hypoglycaemia, fatal or
non-fatal myocardial infarction, angina, heart failure,
stroke, renal failure, amputation [of at least one digit],
vitreous
haemorrhage,
retinopathy
requiring
photocoagulation, blindness in one eye, or cataract
extraction);
diabetes-related
death
(death
from
myocardial infarction, stroke, peripheral vascular disease,
renal disease, hyperglycaemia or hypoglycaemia, and
sudden death); all-cause mortality. Single clinical
endpoints and surrogate subclinical endpoints were also
assessed. All analyses were by intention to treat and
frequency of hypoglycaemia was also analysed by actual
therapy.
Introduction
Started in 1977, the UK Prospective Diabetes Study
(UKPDS) was designed to establish whether, in patients
with type 2 diabetes, intensive blood-glucose control
reduced the risk of macrovascular or microvascular
complications, and whether any particular therapy was
advantageous.
Most intervention studies have assessed microvascular
disease: improved glucose control has delayed the
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development
and
progression
of
retinopathy,
nephropathy, and neuropathy in patients with type 1
diabetes1,2 and those with type 2 diabetes.3 In the UK,
9% of patients with type 2 diabetes develop
microvascular disease within 9 years of diagnosis, but
20% have a macrovascular complicationand
macrovascular disease accounts for 59% of deaths in
these patients.4
Epidemiological studies of the general population have
shown an increased risk of cardiovascular disease with
concentrations of fasting glucose or haemoglobin A1c
(HbA1c) just above the normal range.5,6 The only
previous large-scale randomised trial in type 2 diabetes,
the University Group Diabetes Program (UGDP),7
followed 1000 patients assigned different therapies for
about 55 years (range 38 years) and found no evidence
that improved glucose control, by any therapy, reduced
the risk of cardiovascular endpoints. That study did,
however, report increased risk of cardiovascular
mortality in patients allocated the sulphonylurea,
tolbutamide, and this unexpected finding introduced
new hypotheses.8 These hypotheses included increased
myocardial damage from inhibition of ATP-K+ channel
opening in the presence of myocardial ischaemia9 due to
sulphonylurea binding to the cardiovascular SUR2
receptoran event that could also increase the
likelihood of ventricular arrhythmia.10 An increase in
atherosclerosis with insulin treatment has also been
suggested, since plasma insulin concentrations are
supraphysiological.11,12
838
Methods
Patients
Between 1977 and 1991, general practitioners in the catchment
areas of the 23 participating UKPDS hospitals were asked to
refer all patients with newly diagnosed diabetes aged 2565
years. Patients generally attended a UKPDS clinic within 2
weeks of referral. Patients who had a fasting plasma glucose
(FPG) greater than 6 mmol/L on two mornings, 13 weeks
apart, were eligible for the study. An FPG of 6 mmol/L was
selected because this was just above the upper limit of normal
for our reference range. The exclusion criteria were: ketonuria
more than 3 mmol/L; serum creatinine greater than
175 mol/L; myocardial infarction in the previous year; current
angina or heart failure; more than one major vascular event;
retinopathy requiring laser treatment; malignant hypertension;
uncorrected endocrine disorder; occupation that precluded
insulin therapy (eg, driver of heavy goods vehicle); severe
concurrent illness that would limit life or require extensive
systemic
treatment;
inadequate
understanding;
and
unwillingness to enter the study.
7616 patients were referred and 5102 were recruited (58%
male). The 2514 patients excluded were similar in age, sex, and
glycaemic status to those recruited. The study design and
protocol amendments, which conform with the guidelines of the
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Conventional (n=1138)
Intensive (n=2729)
Demographic
Age (years)*
M/F
Ethnicity (%) Caucasian/Indian Asian/Afro-Caribbean/Other
534 (86)
705/433
81/11/7/1
532 (86)
649/444
81/10/8/1
533 (86)
2359/1508
81/10/8/1
Clinical
Weight (kg)*
Body-mass index (kg/m2)*
Systolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Diastolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Smoking (%) never/ex/current
Alcohol (%) none/social/regular/dependent
Exercise (%) sedentary/moderately active/active/fit
781 (163)
278 (55)
135 (19)
82 (10)
34/35/31
26/56/18/2
20/37/39/4
773 (154)
275 (51)
135 (20)
83 (10)
35/35/30
24/56/17/1
21/34/40/5
Biochemical
FPG (mmol/L)
HBA1c (%)*
Plasma insulin (pmol/L)
Triglyceride (mmol/L)
Total cholesterol (mmol/L)*
LDL-cholesterol (mmol/L)*
HDL-cholesterol (mmol/L)*
80 (7196)
705 (142)
91 (52159)
231 (084635)
54 (102)
35 (099)
108 (024)
775 (155)
275 (52)
135 (20)
82 (10)
34/35/31
22/56/18/1
20/35/40/5
81 (7198)
709 (154)
92 (52159)
237 (085663)
54 (112)
35 (10)
107 (025)
80 (7197)
708 (151)
92 (52160)
235 (084655)
54 (11)
35 (10)
107 (024)
Medications
More than one asprin daily (%)
Diuretic (%)
Others (%) digoxin/antihypertensive/lipid lowering/HRT or OC
15
13
09/12/03/09
17
13
13/12/03/07
16
13
11/12/03/08
36
21
81 (6699)
114
36
17
82 (67100)
118
36
19
81 (67100)
115
Data are % of group, *mean (SD), median (IQR), or geometric mean (1 SD). HRT=hormone replacement therapy. OC=oral contraceptive therapy.
Dietary run-in
Definitions
Conventional
(n=896)
Chlorpropamide
(n=619)
Glibenclamide
(n=615)
Insulin
(n=911)
All patients
(n=3041)
Demographic
Age (years)*
M/F
Ethnicity (%) Caucasian/Indian Asian/Afro Caribbean/Other
54 (9)
555/341
83/9/7/1
54 (9)
359/260
79/10/11/0
54 (8)
381/234
84/8/7/1
54 (8)
656/346
82/8/9/1
54 (8)
1885/1156
82/8/9/1
Clinical
Weight (kg)*
Body-mass index (kg/m2)*
Systolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Diastolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Smoking (%) never/ex/current
Alcohol (%) none/social/regular/dependent
Exercise (%) sedentary/moderately active/active/fit
77 (16)
275 (53)
136 (19)
83 (10)
34/34/32
24/55/20/1
18/38/40/4
75 (15)
270 (49)
136 (19)
83 (10)
38/31/31
26/52/21/1
19/37/40/4
77 (14)
274 (50)
136 (19)
83 (10)
32/38/30
22/58/19/1
18/32/44/6
76 (14)
270 (48)
136 (20)
83 (11)
34/36/30
24/57/18/1
21/35/40/4
76 (15)
272 (50)
136 (19)
83 (10)
35/35/30
24/57/18/1
19/36/41/4
Biochemical
FPG (mmol/L)
HBA1c (%)*
Plasma insulin (pmol/L)
Triglyceride (mmol/L)
Total cholesterol (mmol/L)*
LDL-cholesterol (mmol/L)*
HDL-cholesterol (mmol/L)*
Medications
More than one asprin daily (%)
Diuretic (%)
Others (%) digoxin/antihypertensive/lipid lowering/
HRT or OC
Surrogate clinical endpoints
Retinopathy (%)
Proteinuria (%)
Plasma creatinine (mmol/L)
Biothesiometer more than 25 volts (%)
79 (7194)
62 (12)
89 (51156)
243 (086692)
54 (103)
35 (099)
107 (023)
80 (7197)
63 (14)
90 (51160)
258 (088755)
55 (115)
35 (105)
108 (025)
80 (7296)
63 (13)
91 (52160)
237 (084672)
55 (111)
35 (100)
109 (025)
81 (7199)
61 (11)
90 (52156)
248 (085725)
54 (113)
35 (103)
107 (025)
80 (7196)
62 (12)
90 (52156)
246 (086710)
54 (110)
35 (102)
108 (024)
12
13
05/122/01/03
15
12
10/112/03/03
11
15
13/113/0/05
18
14
13/107/02/07
14
14
10/116/03/05
38
22
80 (6697)
121
40
17
81 (6782)
101
30
21
82 (6799)
152
38
15
81 (6799)
121
38
19
81 (6799)
123
Data are % of group, *mean (SD), median (IQR), or geometric mean (1 SD). HRT=hormone replacement therapy. OC=oral contraceptive therapy.
Table 2: Baseline characteristics of patients in conventional group and individual intensive groups
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Conventional
(n=896)
Chlorpropamide
(n=619)
Glibenclamide
(n=615)
Insulin
(n=911)
Total person-years
9491
6562
6573
5495 (58%)
621 (7%)
1699 (18%)
47 (05%)
1105 (12%)
1458 (15%)
409 (6%)
5266 (80%)
483 (7%)
28 (04%)
900 (14%)
615 (9%)
432 (7%)
126 (2%)
5467 (83%)
17 (03%)
1319 (20%)
681 (10%)
Conventional
(n=1138)
Intensive
(n=2729)
9780
11 188
27 075
1896 (19%)
66 (1%)
823 (8%)
58 (1%)
329 (3%)
7215 (74%)
6490 (58%)
743 (7%)
1715 (15%)
281 (3%)
1132 (10%)
1809 (16%)
3206 (12%)
6372 (24%)
6789 (25%)
1359 (5%)
2581 (10%)
10 413 (38%)
Table 3: Person-years of follow-up on assigned and actual therapies for first 15 and all centres
Randomisation
The flow of patients in the study is shown in figure 1.
Patients were stratified by ideal bodyweight (overweight was
>120% ideal bodyweight).14 Non-overweight patients were
randomly assigned intensive treatment with insulin (30%),
intensive treatment with sulphonylurea (40%: equal
proportions in the first 15 centres to chlorpropamide or
glibenclamide, and in the last eight centres to chorpropamide or
glipizide), or conventional treatment with diet (30%). The
non-balanced randomisation was chosen so that there were
sufficient patients in the two sulphonylurea groups to allow
comparison between the first-generation and second-generation
drugs. Overweight patients were randomly assigned treatment
with the additional possibility of metformin: intensive treatment
with insulin (24%), intensive treatment with sulphonylurea with
equal proportions of patients on chlorpropamide and
glibenclamide (32%), intensive treatment with metformin
(20%), and conventional treatment with diet (24%). The 342
overweight patients who were randomly allocated metformin
therapy are reported separately, as intended per protocol.15
Randomisation was by means of centrally produced,
computer-generated therapy allocations in sealed, opaque
envelopes which were opened in sequence. The numerical
sequence of envelopes used, the dates they were opened, and
the therapies stipulated were monitored. The trial was open
once patients were randomised. No placebo treatments were
given.
Clinic visits
840
Embedded studies
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Figure 2: Cross-sectional and 10-year cohort data for FPG, HbA1c, weight, and fasting plasma insulin in patients on intensive or
conventional treatment
were measured, and therapy was adjusted if necessary. From
a checklist we asked about all medications, hypoglycaemic
episodes, home blood-glucose measurements, illness, time
off work, admissions to hospital, general symptoms including
any drug side-effects, and clinical events. Hypoglycaemic
episodes were defined as minor if the patient was able to
treat the symptoms unaided, or major if third-party help or
medical intervention was necessary. Details of all major
hypoglycaemic episodes were audited to ensure the coding was
appropriate.
At entry, randomisation, 6 months, 1 year, and annually
thereafter a fasting blood sample was taken for measurement of
HbA1c, plasma creatinine (annually from 1989), triglyceride,
total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, insulin,
and insulin antibodies. Every year, urinary albumin and
creatinine were measured in a random urine sample.
At entry and then every 3 years all patients had a full clinical
examination. At these reviews, a 12-lead electrocardiogram was
recorded and Minnesota coded13 and a posterior-anterior chest
radiograph taken for measurement of cardiac diameter. Doppler
blood pressure was measured in both legs and in the right arm.
Visual acuity was measured with a Snellen chart until 1989 and
subsequently with an Early Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
Study (ETDRS) chart.13 The best attainable vision was assessed
with the patients usual spectacles or with a pinhole. Direct
ophthalmoscopy with pupil dilation was carried out every
Biochemistry
Methods have been reported previously.18 Plasma glucose
analysers were monitored monthly in each clinical centre by
the UKPDS Glucose Quality Assurance Scheme; the
mean interlaboratory imprecision was 4% and values were
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Figure 3: Cross-sectional and 10-year cohort data for FPG, HbA1c, weight, and fasting plasma insulin in patients on chlorpropamide,
glibenclamide, or insulin, or conventional treatment
within 01 mmol/L of those obtained by UK External Quality
Assessment Scheme. Plasma creatinine, urea, and urate were
measured in the clinical chemistry laboratories at the clinical
centres. Blood, plasma and urine samples were transported
overnight at 4C to the central biochemistry laboratory for all
other measurements. HbA1c was measured by high-performance
liquid
chromatography
(Biorad
Diamat
Automated
Glycosylated Haemoglobin Analyser, Hemel Hempstead, UK),
and the normal range is 4562%.18 By comparison with the
US National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program,
HbA1c(UKPDS)=1104
HbA1c(DCCT)07336,
(r=099,
n=40). From 1988 urine albumin was measured by an
immunoturbidimetric method (reference range 14365
mg/L).18 Microalbuminuria has been defined for this study as a
urinary albumin concentration greater than 50 mg/L due to
initial storage of urine samples at 20C between 1979 and
1988, and clinical-grade proteinuria as urinary albumin
concentrations greater than 300 mg/L.19 Insulin was measured
by double-antibody radioimmunoassay (Pharmacia RIA 100
842
Clinical endpoints
21 clinical endpoints were predefined in the study protocol in
198113 and are listed later. Particular disorders were defined:
myocardial infarction by WHO clinical criteria with
electrocardiogram/enzyme changes or new pathological Q wave;
angina by WHO clinical criteria and confirmed by a new
electrocardiogram abnormality or positive exercise test; heart
failure (not associated with myocardial infarction), by clinical
symptoms confirmed by Kerley B lines, rles, raised jugular
venous pressure, or third heart sound; major stroke by
symptoms or signs for 1 month or longer; limb amputation as
amputation of at least one digit; blindness in one eye by WHO
criteria with Snellen-chart visual acuity of 6/60 or worse, or
ETDRS logMAR 10 or worse, for 3 months; and renal failure
by dialysis or plasma creatinine greater than 250 mol/L not
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Figure 4: Proportion of patients with aggregate and single endpoints by intensive and conventional treatment and relative risks
related to any acute intercurrent illness. The clinical decision
for photocoagulation or cataract extraction was made by
ophthalmologists independent of the trial.
Aggregate endpoints were defined by the Data-Monitoring
and Ethics Committee in 1981 as time to the first occurrence
of: any diabetes-related endpoint (sudden death, death from
hyperglycaemia or hypoglycaemia, fatal or non-fatal myocardial
infarction, angina, heart failure, stroke, renal failure,
amputation [of at least one digit], vitreous haemorrhage, retinal
photocoagulation, blindness in one eye, or cataract extraction);
diabetes-related death (death from myocardial infarction,
stroke,
peripheral
vascular
disease,
renal
disease,
hyperglycaemia or hypoglycaemia, and sudden death); all-cause
mortality. These aggregates were used to assess the difference
between conventional and intensive treatment.
To investigate differences among chlorpropamide, insulin,
and glibenclamide, four additional clinical-endpoint aggregates
were used: myocardial infarction (fatal and non-fatal) and
sudden death; stroke (fatal and non-fatal); amputation or death
due to peripheral vascular disease; and microvascular
complications (retinopathy requiring photocoagulation, vitreous
haemorrhage, and or fatal or non-fatal renal failure).
Surrogate endpoints
Subclinical, surrogate variables were assessed every 3 years.
The criteria were: for neuropathyloss of both ankle or both
knee reflexes or mean biothesiometer reading from both toes 25
V or greater; for autonomic neuropathyR-R interval less than
the age-adjusted normal range (a ratio <103 of the longest R-R
interval at approximately beat 30 to the shortest at
approximately beat 15); for orthostatic hypotensionsystolic
fall of 30 mm Hg or more, or diastolic fall of 10 mm Hg or
more; and for impotenceno ejaculation or erection.
Retinopathy was defined as one microaneurysm or more in one
eye or worse retinopathy, and progression of retinopathy as a
two-step change in grade. Poor visual acuity was: logMAR
more than 03 (unable to drive a car), more than 07 (US
definition of blindness), and logMAR 10 or greater (WHO
definition of blindness). Deterioration of vision was defined as a
Statistical analysis
When the UKPDS started in the late 1970s, it was thought that
improved blood-glucose control might reduce the incidence of
diabetes-related endpoints by 40%. This seemed reasonable
since the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with diabetes
is at least twice that of people with normal glucose tolerance
and microvascular complications do not occur in the
normoglycaemic population. The first three aggregate
endpoints were defined and, for death and major cardiovascular
events (the stopping criteria), the original power calculation to
find a 40% difference between the intensive and conventional
groups was a sample size of 3600 with 81% power at the 1%
level of significance.
However, by 1987 no risk reduction was seen in any of these
aggregates and it became obvious a 40% advantage was unlikely
to be obtained. The publication of other intervention studies of
chronic diseases in the mid 1980s suggested that a more
realistic goal would be a difference of 15%. Accordingly, the
study was extended to include randomisation of 3867 patients
with a median time from randomisation of 11 years to the end
of the study in 1997. In 1992, at the 1% level of significance,
the power for any diabetes-related endpoint and for diabetesrelated death was calculated as 81% and 23%, respectively.
There was the same proportion of patients in the
843
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Figure 5: Proportion of patients with aggregate and single endpoints by individual intensive treatment and conventional treatment
and relative risks
Key as for figure 4.
844
Safety
The Data-monitoring and Ethics Committee reviewed the
endpoint analyses every 6 months to decide whether to stop or
modify the study according to predetermined guidelines. These
ARTICLES
Figure 5: Continued
guidelines included a difference of 3 SD or more by log-rank
test in the three aggregate endpoints between intensive and
conventional blood-glucose control groups.13 The stopping
criteria were not attained.
Results
Background and biochemical data
4763 (93%) of 5102 patients had mean FPG of 70
mmol/L or more (American Diabetes Association
criteria),22 and 4396 (86%) of 5102 had values greater
than 78 mmol/L (WHO criteria).23
Baseline characteristics of the 3867 patients assigned
conventional or intensive treatment are given in table 1.
The baseline characteristics of the 3041 patients in the
comparison of conventional treatment with each of the
three intensive agents are in table 2.
The median follow-up for endpoint analyses was 100
years (IQR 77124). The median follow-up for the
comparison of conventional treatment with each of the
three intensive agents was 111 years (90130). The
ARTICLES
Figure 6: Kaplan-Meier plots of aggregate endpoints: any diabetes-related endpoint and diabetes-related death for conventional or
intensive treatment, and by individual intensive therapy
Key as for figures 3 and 4.
ARTICLES
Figure 7: Kaplan-Meier plots of aggregate endpoints: microvascular disease, myocardial infarction, and stroke for intensive and
conventional treatment and by individual intensive therapy
Microvascular disease=renal failure, death from renal failure, retinal photocoagulation, or vitreous haemorrhage. Myocardial infarction=non-fatal, fatal,
or sudden death. Stroke=non-fatal and fatal. Key as for figures 3 and 4.
ARTICLES
Surrogate endpoints
Figure 8 shows the proportion of patients with surrogate
endpoints (two-step progression of retinopathy,
biothesiometer threshold, microalbuminuria, proteinuria, and two-fold increase in plasma creatinine) found
at 3-year visits. After 6 years follow-up, a smaller
proportion of patients in the intensive group than in the
conventional group had a two-step deterioration in
retinopathy: this finding was significant even when
retinal photocoagulation was excluded (data not shown).
When the three intensive treatments were compared,
patients assigned chlorpropamide did not have the same
risk reduction as those assigned glibenclamide or insulin
(p=00056) for the progression of retinopathy at 12
years follow-up, and adjustment for the difference in
mean systolic or diastolic blood pressure by logistic
regression analysis did not change this finding.
There was no difference between conventional and
intensive treatments in the deterioration of visual acuity
with a mean ETDRS chart reduction of one letter per
3 years in each group. At 12 years the proportion of
patients blind in both eyes (logMAR>07) did not differ
between the intensive and conventional groups (6/734
[08%]) vs 5/263 [19%], p=015). 11% of patients in
both groups did not have adequate vision for a driving
licence (logMAR > 03 in both eyes).
Proportions of patients with absent ankle reflexes did
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Figure 9: Major and any hypoglycaemic episodes per year by intention-to-treat analysis and actual therapy for intensive and
conventional treatment
Data from the first 15 centres. The numbers of patients studied at 5, 10, and 15 years in the intensive and conventional groups by actual therapy were
1317, 395; 762, 150; and 120, 14 respectively.
Discussion
We found that an intensive blood-glucose-control policy
with an 11% reduction in median HbA1c over the first 10
years decreased the frequency of some clinical
complications of type 2 diabetes. The intensive
treatment group had a substantial, 25% reduction in the
risk of microvascular endpoints, most of which was due
to fewer patients requiring photocoagulation. There
ARTICLES
Figure 10: Major and any hypoglycaemic episodes by intention-to-treat analysis and actual therapy by individual intensive therapy
and conventional treatment
Data from first 15 centres. The numbers of patients studied at 5, 10 and 15 years in the intensive groups with chlorpropamide, glibenclamide and
insulin and the conventional group by actual therapy were 380, 378, 559, 395; 171, 175, 416, 150; and 21, 16, 83, 14 respectively.
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851
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R H Greenwood, J Wilson, M J Denholm, R C Temple, K Whitfield,
F Johnson, C Munroe, S Gorick, E Duckworth, M Fatman, S Rainbow
(Norwich); L J Borthwick, D J Wheatcroft, R J Seaman, R A Christie,
W Wheatcroft, P Musk, J White, S McDougal, M Bond, P Raniga
(Stevenage); J L Day, M J Doshi, J G Wilson, J R Howard-Williams,
H Humphreys, A Graham, K Hicks, S Hexman, P Bayliss, D Pledger
(Ipswich); R W Newton, R T Jung, C Roxburgh, B Kilgallon, L Dick,
M Foster, N Waugh, S Kilby, A Ellingford, J Burns (Dundee); C V Fox,
M C Holloway, H M Coghill, N Hein, A Fox, W Cowan, M Richard,
K Quested, S J Evans (Northampton); R B Paisey, N P R Brown,
A J Tucker, R Paisey, F Garrett, J Hogg, P Park, K Williams, P Harvey,
R Wilcocks, S Mason, J Frost, C Warren, P Rocket, L Bower (Torbay);
J M Roland, D J Brown, J Youens, K Stanton-King, H Mungall, V Ball,
W Maddison, D Donnelly, S King, P Griffin, S Smith, S Church,
G Dunn, A Wilson, K Palmer (Peterborough); P M Brown,
D Humphriss, A J M Davidson, R Rose, L Armistead, S Townsend,
P Poon (Scarborough); I D A Peacock, N J C Culverwell,
M H Charlton, B P S Connolly, J Peacock, J Barrett, J Wain,
W Beeston, G King, P G Hill (Derby); A J M Boulton, A M Robertson,
V Katoulis, A Olukoga, H McDonald, S Kumar, F Abouaesha,
B Abuaisha, E A Knowles, S Higgins, J Booker, J Sunter, K Breislin,
R Parker, P Raval, J Curwell, H Davenport, G Shawcross, A Prest,
J Grey, H Cole, C Sereviratne (Manchester); R J Young, T L Dornan,
J R Clyne, M Gibson, I OConnell, L M Wong, S J Wilson, K L Wright,
C Wallace, D McDowell (Salford); A C Burden, E M Sellen, R Gregory,
M Roshan, N Vaghela, M Burden, C Sherriff, S Mansingh, J Clarke,
J Grenfell (Leicester); J E Tooke, K MacLeod, C Seamark, M Rammell,
C Pym, J Stockman, C Yeo, J Piper, L Leighton, E Green, M Hoyle, K
Jones, A Hudson, A J James, A Shore, A Higham, B Martin (Exeter).
9
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20
21
Acknowledgments
We thank the patients and many NHS and non-NHS staff at the centres
for their cooperation; Philip Bassett for editorial assistance; and
Caroline Wood, Kathy Waring, and Lorraine Mallia for typing the
papers. The study was supported by grants from the UK Medical
Research Council, British Diabetic Association, UK Department of
Health, US National Eye Institute and US National Institute of
Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Disease (National Institutes of Health),
British Heart Foundation, Wellcome Trust, Charles Wolfson Charitable
Trust, Clothworkers Foundation, Health Promotion Research Trust,
Alan and Babette Sainsbury Trust, Oxford University Medical Research
Fund Committee, Novo-Nordisk, Bayer, Bristol-Myers Squibb,
Hoechst, Lilly, Lipha, and Farmitalia Carlo Erba. We also thank
Boehringer Mannheim, Becton Dickinson, Owen Mumford, Securicor,
Kodak, Cortecs Diagnostics. We thank Glaxo Wellcome, Smith Kline
Beecham, Pfizer, Zeneca, Pharmacia and Upjohn, and Roche for
funding epidemiological, statistical, and health-economics analyses.
22
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121: 92835.
37 Birkeland KI, Rishaug U, Hanssen KE, Vaaler S. NIDDM: a rapid
progressive disease. Diabetologia 1996; 39: 162933.
38 Yki-Jrvinen H, Kauppila M, Kujansuu E, et al. Comparison of
insulin regimens in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes
mellitus. N Engl J Med 1992; 327: 142633.
39 Chow CC, Tsang LWW, Sorensen JP. Comparison of insulin with or
without continuation of oral hypoglycaemic agents in the treatment
of secondary failure in NIDDM patients. Diabetes Care 1995; 18:
30714.
40 American Diabetes Association. Standards of medical care for
patients with diabetes mellitus. Diabetes Care 1998; 21 (suppl 1):
S23-S31.
853
ARTICLES
Summary
Background In patients with type 2 diabetes, intensive
blood-glucose control with insulin or sulphonylurea
therapy decreases progression of microvascular disease
and may also reduce the risk of heart attacks. This study
investigated whether intensive glucose control with
metformin has any specific advantage or disadvantage.
Methods Of 4075 patients recruited to UKPDS in 15
centres, 1704 overweight (>120% ideal bodyweight)
patients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes, mean age
53 years, had raised fasting plasma glucose (FPG;
61150 mmol/L) without hyperglycaemic symptoms
after 3 months initial diet. 753 were included in a
randomised controlled trial, median duration 107 years,
of conventional policy, primarily with diet alone (n=411)
versus intensive blood-glucose control policy with
metformin, aiming for FPG below 6 mmol/L (n=342). A
secondary analysis compared the 342 patients allocated
metformin with 951 overweight patients allocated
intensive blood-glucose control with chlorpropamide
(n=265), glibenclamide (n=277), or insulin (n=409). The
primary outcome measures were aggregates of any
diabetes-related clinical endpoint, diabetes-related death,
and all-cause mortality. In a supplementary randomised
controlled trial, 537 non-overweight and overweight
patients, mean age 59 years, who were already on
maximum sulphonylurea therapy but had raised FPG
(6115.0
mmol/L)
were
allocated
continuing
sulphonylurea therapy alone (n=269) or addition of
metformin (n=268).
Findings Median glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) was 74%
in the metformin group compared with 80% in the
conventional group. Patients allocated metformin,
compared with the conventional group, had risk
reductions of 32% (95% CI 1347, p=0002) for any
diabetes-related endpoint, 42% for diabetes-related death
(963, p=0017), and 36% for all-cause mortality (955,
p=0011). Among patients allocated intensive bloodglucose control, metformin showed a greater effect than
chlorpropamide, glibenclamide, or insulin for any
diabetes-related endpoint (p=00034), all-cause mortality
(p=0021), and stroke (p=0032). Early addition of
metformin in sulphonylurea-treated patients was
*Study organisation given at end of paper
Correspondence to: Prof Robert Turner, UKPDS Group,
Diabetes Research Laboratories, Radcliffe Infirmary,
Oxford OX2 6HE, UK
854
Introduction
The UK Prospective Diabetes Study reported that
intensive blood-glucose control with sulphonylureas or
insulin substantially reduced the risk of complications
but not macrovascular disease.1
Metformin is a biguanide that decreases blood glucose
concentration by mechanisms different from those of
sulphonylurea or insulin. It lowers, rather than
increases, fasting plasma insulin concentrations2 and
acts by enhancing insulin sensitivity, inducing greater
peripheral uptake of glucose, and decreasing hepatic
glucose output.3 The improved glucose control is
achieved without weight gain.4 Biguanides also decrease
concentrations of plasminogen-activator inhibitor type 1
(PAI-1)5 and may thus increase fibrinolytic activity. This
effect may be secondary either to enhanced insulin
sensitivity or to lower insulin concentrations, because
therapy with troglitazone (a thiazolidinedione) also
decreases production of PAI-1 and increases insulin
sensitivity.6
The only long-term outcome data on biguanides
available were from the University Group Diabetes
Program (UGDP) study of phenformin. An unexpected
outcome was higher mortality from cardiovascular
causes with phenformin than with placebo, and for total
mortality for phenformin than with a combination of
ARTICLES
Methods
Patients
855
ARTICLES
856
ARTICLES
Demographic
Age (years)*
M/F
Ethnicity (%) Caucasian/Indian Asian/
Afro-Caribbean/other
Clinical
Weight (kg)*
Body-mass index (kg/m2)
Systolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Diastolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Smoking (%) never/ex/current
Alcohol (%) none/social/regular/
dependent
Exercise (%) sedentary/moderately
active/active/fit
Biochemical
FPG (mmol/L)
HBA1c (%)*
Plasma insulin (pmol/L)
Triglyceride (mmol/L)
Total cholesterol (mmol/L)*
LDL cholesterol (mmol/L)*
HDL cholesterol (mmol/L)*
Medications
More than one aspirin daily (%)
Diuretic (%)
Others (%) digoxin/antihypertensives/
lipid lowering/HRT or OC
Surrogate clinical endpoints
Retinopathy (%)
Proteinuria (%)
Plasma creatinine (mmol/L)
Biothesiometer more than 25 V (%)
Conventional
(n=411)
Metformin
(n=342)
Insulin
(n=409)
Chlorpropamide
(n=265)
Glibenclamide
(n=277)
All patients
(n=1704)
53 (9)
193 (47%)/218
86/6/7/1
53 (8)
157 (46%)/185
85/4/10/1
53 (8)
192 (47%)/217
88/4/8/0
53 (9)
119 (45%)/146
86/6/8/0
53 (9)
127 (46%)/150
87/4/8/1
53 (8)
784 (46%)/920
86/5/8/1
87 (15)
318 (49)
140 (18)
86 (10)
39/36/25
30/56/14/05
87 (17)
316 (48)
140 (18)
85 (9)
43/32/25
27/58/14/15
85 (14)
310 (42)
139 (19)
85 (10)
37/34/39
27/57/15/12
85 (15)
312 (45)
141 (18)
86 (9)
38/30/32
28/54/17/11
86 (14)
315 (44)
139 (19)
85 (9)
34/35/31
25/56/19/11
86 (15)
314 (46)
140 (18)
86 (10)
38/34/28
27/56/15/11
24/40/34/3
29/34/35/3
24/37/36/4
21/38/38/3
21/34/40/5
24/36/36/4
80 (7193)
71 (15)
114 (71183)
296 (103847)
55 (10)
366 (104)
104 (022)
81 (7298)
82 (72100)
80 (7296)
82 (7396)
81 (7197)
73 (15)
72 (15)
72 (17)
72 (15)
72 (15)
116 (66203)
116 (71186)
111 (65189)
114 (68189)
114 (69190)
279 (101774)
289 (102819)
285 (103786)
265 (099710)
284 (102792)
56 (13)
56 (11)
56 (12)
56 (12)
56 (12)
367 (116)
369 (104)
359 (110)
359 (107)
365 (108)
106 (023)
105 (023)
105 (023)
107 (026)
105 (023)
15
20
05/16/04/04
15
17
09/15/0/03
29
20
17/12/0/03
19
20
19/15/07/04
11
19
04/16/0/07
18
19
09/15/01/04
33
31
78 (6496)
136
38
20
77 (6395)
137
39
11
77 (6394)
154
37
22
79 (6596)
199
29
26
79 (6597)
143
36
22
79 (6696)
152
Table 1: Baseline characteristics of patients in conventional group and in individual intensive-treatment groups
sulphonylurea-treated patients allocated addition of metformin
led us to undertake a further statistical analysis. Following a
test for heterogeneity between the two trials described above,15
a combined analysis of addition of metformin in patients on
diet therapy and in those on sulphonylurea therapy was done.
The datasets were merged by taking time from randomisation
to metformin or not, to an event, or to a censor date. A formal
meta-analysis16 was also done.
Epidemiological assessment
We excluded 623 of the patients (537 in randomised controlled
trial in patients on maximum sulphonylurea treatment of early
or late addition of metformin, and 86 patients who had
insufficient baseline data or were not in the main three ethnic
groups). The aim of the epidemiological assessment in 4416
participants was to find out whether the combination of
sulphonylurea and metformin was associated with an increase
in mortality from diabetes-related causes. 457 patients were
treated by sulphonylurea and metformin: 107 patients assigned
conventional therapy in the main randomisation who received
the combination after recurrent episodes of protocol-defined
marked hyperglycaemia; 257 patients assigned sulphonylurea
or metformin in the main randomisation, or those with marked
hyperglycaemia after the initial 3 months period, who had the
other therapy added when marked hyperglycaemia developed;
and 93 who refused allocated insulin. All these patients were
treated by combined therapy because of the progressive
hyperglycaemia of type 2 diabetes,11 but if marked
hyperglycaemia recurred, the treatment of these patients was
changed to insulin. The combination of sulphonylurea and
metformin was compared with all other therapies in terms of
diabetes-related deaths by means of a Cox proportionalhazards model, with the actual therapy as a time-dependent
covariate, and allowance for age, sex, ethnic group, and FPG
after 3 months diet.
Clinic visits
Patients were seen every month for the first 3 months and then
every 3 months or more frequently if required to attain control
criteria. Patients attended fasting for plasma glucose and other
biochemical measurements, blood pressure and bodyweight
were measured, and therapy was adjusted if necessary. Details
were recorded of actual therapies, hypoglycaemic episodes, and
home blood-glucose monitoring. At each visit, patients were
asked whether they had experienced hypoglycaemic symptoms.
Physicians recorded hypoglycaemic episodes as minor when the
patient was able to treat the symptoms unaided, or major if
third-party help or medical intervention was necessary. The
number of patients, in an allocation and taking the allocated
therapy, who had one or more minor or major hypoglycaemic
episodes in a year was recorded, and the mean over 10 years
calculated. Hypoglycaemic episodes in each year were analysed
both by intention to treat and by actual therapy.
857
ARTICLES
Figure 3: Median FPG, median HbA1c, mean change in bodyweight, and median change in fasting plasma insulin in cohorts of
patients followed up to 10 years by assigned treatment (shown by continuous lines)
Cross-sectional data at each year are shown by individual symbols for all patients assigned regimen.
Biochemistry
Methods have been previously reported.1,17 The normal range
was
4562%.
for
glycated
haemoglobin
(HbA1c)
Microalbuminuria has been defined for this study as urinary
albumin concentration above 50 mg/L and clinical grade
proteinuria as more than 300 mg/L.
Assignment
All randomisations were done at the level of the individual
patient, by means of therapy allocations in sealed opaque
envelopes, which were opened in sequence. The numerical
858
Statistical analysis
Analyses were by intention to treat. Life-table analyses were
done with log-rank tests and hazard ratios, used to estimate
relative risks, were obtained from Cox proportional-hazards
models. For the primary and secondary outcome analyses of
clinical endpoint aggregates, 95% CIs are quoted. For single
endpoints 99% CIs are quoted, to make allowance for potential
type 1 errors.1 Further details are given in the accompanying
paper.1
Results
Intensive blood-glucose control with metformin versus
conventional treatment in overweight patients
Table 1 shows the baseline data for overweight patients
ARTICLES
Figure 4: Proportion of patients who reported one or more episodes of major hypoglycaemia or any hypoglycaemia per year,
assessed by actual therapy and by allocation (intention to treat)
Numbers of patients studied at 5 years, 10 years, and 15 years in actual therapy analysis=168, 60, and 6 for conventional group; 220, 101, and 6 for
metformin group; 235, 166, and 26 for insulin group; 148, 60, and 5 for chlorpropamide group; and 161, 71, and 6 for glibenclamide group.
ARTICLES
ARTICLES
Figure 6: Incidence of clinical endpoints among patients assigned intensive control with metformin (n=342), intensive control with
chlorpropamide, glibenclamide, or insulin (intensive; n=951), or conventional control (n=411)
Relative risk (RR) is for metformin or intensive group compared with conventional group.
Figure 7: Kaplan-Meier plots in diet/metformin study for microvascular disease (renal failure or death from renal failure, retinopathy
requiring photocoagulation, or vitreous haemorrhage), myocardial infarction (non-fatal and fatal, including sudden death), stroke
(non-fatal and fatal) and cataract extraction
Similar plots of data for sulphonylurea/metformin study are superimposed showing relative time of commencement.
861
ARTICLES
Epidemiological analysis
The 4417 patients had 45 527 person-years of followup; 5181 (11%) of these person-years were treated with
sulphonylurea plus metformin therapy. 39 (8%) of the
490 diabetes-related deaths occurred while patients
were receiving sulphonylurea plus metformin therapy. A
Cox proportional-hazards model, with adjustment for
age, sex, ethnic group, and FPG after 3 months diet,
Demographic
Age (years)*
M/F
Ethnicity (%) Caucasian/Indian Asian/Afro-Caribbean/other
58 (9)
164 (61%)/108
77/13/10/0
59 (8)
158 (59%)/118
77/11/12/0
59 (9)
322 (60%)/226
77/11/11/1
Clinical
Weight (kg)*
Body-mass index (kg/m2)
Systolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Diastolic blood pressure (mm Hg)*
Smoking (%) never/ex/current
Alcohol (%) none/social/regular/dependent
Exercise (%) sedentary/moderately active/active/fit
82 (16)
294 (57)
138 (21)
81 (11)
31/40/29
37/44/18/04
14/38/45/3
83 (16)
297 (53)
140 (20)
83 (11)
35/40/24
32/51/16/11
22/35/39/4
83 (16)
296 (55)
139 (21)
82 (11)
33/40/27
34/52/13/08
18/37/42/3
Biochemical
FPG (mmol/L)
HBA1c (%)*
Plasma insulin (pmol/L)
Triglyceride (mmol/L)
Total cholesterol (mmol/L)*
LDL cholesterol (mmol/L)*
HDL cholesterol (mmol/L)*
92 (78109)
76 (18)
102 (58180)
161 (091286)
59 (10)
367 (096)
108 (028)
90 (76113)
75 (17)
102 (58181)
164 (089304)
56 (11)
353 (093)
110 (030)
91 (77111)
75 (17)
102 (58181)
163 (090295)
56 (11)
360 (095)
109 (029)
Medications
More than one aspirin daily (%)
Diuretic (%)
Others (%) digoxin/antihypertensives/lipid lowering/HRT or OC
64
13
19/24/04/08
45
16
15/25/0/04
55
15
17/25/04/08
Data are % of group, *mean (SD), median (IQR), or geometric mean ( 1 SD).
HRT=hormone replacement therapy; OC=oral contraceptive therapy.
Table 2: Baseline characteristics of patients assigned sulphonylurea treatment and subsequently randomised to continuing
sulphonylurea treatment alone or with early addition of metformin
862
ARTICLES
Figure 9: Median FPG and median HbA1c in cohorts of patients followed to 10 years from primary randomisation in diet vs metformin
study, and cohorts of patients followed to 4 years from second randomisation to sulphonylurea alone or sulphonylurea plus
metformin in sulphonylurea vs metformin study
Discussion
The main trial reported in this paper evaluated the
effect of metformin in diet-treated overweight patients
with type 2 diabetes. The study design parallels that in
the accompanying paper,1 comparing conventional
blood-glucose control primarily with diet alone and
intensive treatment with sulphonylurea or insulin. The
data shown here suggest that metformin therapy in diettreated overweight patients reduced the risk for any
diabetes-related endpoint, diabetes-related death, and
Figure 10: Incidence of clinical endpoints in sulphonylurea vs metformin study and diet vs metformin study
Relative risk (RR) is for comparison with conventional or sulphonylurea alone. Results of a combined analysis of these two studies shown also.
863
ARTICLES
Conclusion
The addition of metformin in patients already treated
with sulphonylureas requires further study. On balance,
metformin treatment appears to be advantageous as a
first-line pharmacological therapy in diet-treated
overweight patients with type 2 diabetes.
ARTICLES
Hope Hospital, Salford; Leicester General Hospital; Royal Devon and
Exeter Hospital.
8
9
Acknowledgments
We thank the patients and many NHS and non-NHS staff at the centres
for their cooperation.
Major grants for this study were obtained from the UK Medical
Research Council, British Diabetic Association, the UK Department of
Health, the National Eye Institute and the National Institute of
Digestive, Diabetes and Kidney Disease in the National Institutes of
Health, USA, the British Heart Foundation, Novo-Nordisk, Bayer,
Bristol Myers Squibb, Hoechst, Lilly, Lipha, and Farmitalia Carlo Erba.
Other funding companies and agencies, the supervising committees, and
all participating staff are listed in reference 11.
10
11
12
13
14
References
1
4
5
15
16
17
18
19
20
865
Reviews/Commentaries/Position Statements
R E V I E W
A R T I C L E
From the 1Department of Medicine, Division of Diabetes, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Hannele Yki-Jarvinen, MD, FRCP, Department of Medicine, Division of Diabetes, P.O. Box 340, 00029 HUS, Helsinki, Finland. E-mail: ykijarvi@helsinki.fi.
Received for publication 19 October 2000 and accepted in revised form 2 January 2001.
Abbreviations: GADA, GAD antibodies; UKPDS, U.K. Prospective Diabetes Study.
A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Syste`me International (SI) units and conversion
factors for many substances.
758
Metformin alone
MET bedtime NPH
Metformin and sulfonylureas
GLYB MET bedtime NPH
GLYB MET morning NPH
GLYB MET bedtime NPH
GLYB MET bedtime NPH
Weighted mean
Sulfonylurea regimens
GLIMEP bedtime 30/70
GLYB bedtime NPH
GLYB bedtime NPH
GLYB morning NPH
GLYB Ins
GLYB lispro t.i.d.
GLYB bedtime NPH
GLYB Ins
GLYB Ins
GLICL Ins
Weighted mean
Combination
regimen
6
12
6
6
6
2
2
4
4
12
12
3
3
6
12
Duration
(months)
7.6% Comb
7.8% Comb
8.1% Comb
8.2% Ins
8.4% Comb
8.4% Comb
8.5% Ins
8.8% Comb
9.8% Comb
11.8% Ins
7.6% Comb
7.7% Comb
8.0% Comb
8.4% Ins
7.2% Comb
End
HbA1c*
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
Better with GLYB
Better with GLYB
Better with GLICL
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
Glycemia
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
No
No
Yes
Placebo
control
Less with MET
No difference
No difference
Less with MET
Less with MET
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
Less with GLYB
No difference
Less with Ins
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Crossover
Crossover
Parallel
Weight
gain
Parallel
Crossover/
parallel
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
Hypoglycemia
37
55
38
33
43
36
56
50
21
35
42
62
58
44
74
62
32
Difference in
insulin dose (%)
The trials are grouped according to the oral agent used and then ranked within these groups based on glycemic control at the end of treatment with the better regimen. Only trials lasting 2 months or longer
are included; *HbA1c at the end of treatment in the group with better control (even if not significantly better in one group versus the other); % difference in insulin doses at the end of treatment with a
combination regimen versus insulin alone; significant difference; HbA1 Comb, combination regimen; GLICL, gliclazide; GLIMEP, glimepiride; GLYB, glyburide; Ins, regimen containing insulin alone; MET,
metformin; 30/70 an insulin mixture containing 30% regular insulin and 70% NPH.
25
12
29
29
55
32
32
28
27
56
12
15
15
16
12
Reference
no.
Table 1Studies comparing combination treatment regimens with insulin to insulin alone in insulin-naive type 2 diabetic patients
Yki-Jarvinen
759
760
Metformin regimens
MET insulin
MET insulin
MET insulin
MET insulin
Weighted mean
Sulfonylurea regimens
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
SU insulin
GLYB insulin
TOLAZ insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
GLIP insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
TOLAZ insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
Weighted mean
Glitazone
ROSI insulin
TRO insulin
PIO insulin
-Glucosidase inhibitor
ACARB insulin
ACARB insulin
Combination
regimen
6
12
6
6
4
3
3
12
4
3
12
3
4
3
4
11
2
2
2
12
2
6
4
3
6
Duration
(months)
8.3%
7.3%
7.8%
7.9%
8.6%
6.0% Comb
7.0% Comb
7.5% Comb
8.3% Comb
8.8% Comb
8.8% Comb
9.1% Comb
9.6% Comb
9.8% Comb
10.2 Comb
10.3% Ins
11.0% Comb
12.4% Comb
12.6% Comb
12.9% Ins
13.0% Comb
6.5% Comb
7.8% Comb
7.8% Comb
9.8% Comb
End HbA1c*
or HbAI
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Placebo
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Crossover
Parallel
Parallel
Crossover
Crossover
Parallel
Crossover
Parallel
Crossover
Crossover
Crossover
Crossover
Crossover
Crossover
Crossover
Crossover
Parallel
Parallel
Crossover
Parallel
Parallel/
crossover
No difference
Better with GLYB
No difference
Better with GLYB
Better with GLYB
Better with GLYB
Better with GLYB
Better with GLYB
No difference
Better with GLYB
Better with GLYB
No difference
Better with GLYB
No difference
No difference
Better with GLYB
Glycemia
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
Fixed
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
Weight gain
No difference
No difference
Hypoglycemias
Fixed
0
46
25
20
35
20
23
47
7
Fixed
35
3
7
2
Fixed
Fixed
22
0
21
23
26
3
20
19
Difference in
insulin dose (%)
The trials are grouped according to the oral agent used and then ranked within these groups based on glycemic control at the end of treatment with the better regimen. Only trials lasting 2 months or longer
are included. *HbA1c at the end of treatment in the group with better control (even if not significantly better in one group versus the other); % difference in insulin doses at the end of treatment with a
combination regimen versus insulin alone; statistically significant difference between insulin combination therapy versus insulin alone; HbA1 reference range higher than that for HbA1c; trials in which the
insulin dose was fixed are not included in the calculation of the weighted mean. ACARB, acarbose; Comb, combination regimen; GLIP, glipizide; Irs, regimen containing insulin; PIO, pioglitazone; ROSI,
rosiglitazone; SU, various sulfonylureas; TOLAZ, tolazamide; TRO, troglitazone.
65
66
54
52
53
45
58
46
26
47
59
60
61
62
49
48
50
44
63
64
51
24
42
43
57
Reference
no.
Table 2Studies comparing combination treatment regimens with insulin to insulin alone in previously insulin-treated type 2 diabetic patients
Yki-Jarvinen
Figure 1Weight gain in previously insulin-treated patients during treatment with insulin combination regimens containing metformin (MET) (24,42,43), various sulfonylureas (SU) (26,44
51), and glitazones (GLIT) (5254) and in insulin-nave patients treated with insulin and MET
(12), SUMET (12,15,16), and SU (12,25,2729).
Table 3Changes in glycosylated hemoglobin and serum triglycerides during treatment with insulin alone as compared with combination
therapies with insulin and oral agents in insulin-naive patients
Ref.
no.
12
Combination
regimen
Metformin alone
MET bedtime NPH
Baseline Change Baseline Change Baseline Change Baseline Change Better Better
Duration HbA1c in HbA1c HbA1c in HbA1c S-Tg in S-Tg S-Tg in S-Tg regimen regimen
S-Tg glycemia
Comb Comb
Ins
Ins
(months)
Ins
Ins
Comb
Comb
12
9.9
2.0
9.8
2.5
2.6
0.9
2.4
0.7
NS
Comb
12
15
15
16
12
3
3
6
9.9
9.6
9.6
10.7
9.9
2.0
1.6
1.6
2.3
1.9
9.9
9.5
9.9
10.2
9.9
2.1
1.7
1.9
1.5
1.9
2.6
2.4
2.4
1.8
2.4
0.9
0.6
0.6
0.4
0.7
2.3
2.6
2.5
2.1
2.4
0.4
0.3
0.6
0.2
0.4
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
25
12
29
29
55
28
27
Sulfonylurea regimens
GLIMEP bedtime 30/70
GLYB bedtime NPH
GLYB bedtime NPH
GLYB morning NPH
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
Weighted mean
6
12
6
6
6
4
4
9.9
9.9
11.2
11.2
11.5*
9.7*
10.4*
10.5
2.0
2.0
3.0
3.0
2.2
0.8
0.2
2.2
9.7
9.8
10.5
11.1
10.4*
10.1*
10.6*
10.2
2.1
2.0
2.3
2.6
2.2
1.3
0.8
2.1
3.1
2.6
2.4
2.4
2.0
3.1
3.6
2.7
1.0
0.8
0.7
0.7
0.4
0.6
1.1
0.8
3.2
2.7
2.0
2.2
2.2
2.8
3.6
2.7
0.3
0.8
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.8
1.2
0.6
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
Comb
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
Comb
Comb
The trials are grouped according to the oral agent used and then ranked within these groups based on glycemic control at the end of treatment with the better regimen.
Only trials lasting at least 2 months are included. *HbA1 value; denotes a statistically significant difference between insulin combination therapy versus insulin
alone; significant difference at the end versus start of the treatment period. Comb, combination regimen; Ins, regimen containing insulin alone; S-Tg, serum
triglycerides (mmol/l). For other abbreviations, see Table 1.
(Table 3). LDL and HDL cholesterol concentrations remained unchanged in all
studies, with no differences between regimens (12,15,16,25,2729).
Previously insulin-treated patients.
As summarized in Table 4, the greater improvement in glycemic control with insulin combination therapy than with insulin
alone in 11 of 14 studies has not been
consistently (4 of 11 studies) associated
with a greater decrease in serum triglycerides. These data demonstrate that factors
other than average glucose concentrations
determine the degree of lowering of serum triglycerides. Overall, the available
comparisons of changes in serum lipid
and lipoprotein concentrations in both
insulin-na ve and previously insulintreated patients do not allow definitive
conclusions and do not support choice of
one treatment regimen over another.
BLOOD PRESSURE
Regarding blood pressure, in a follow-up
study of the patients participating in the
FINMIS study (15,30), blood pressure increased significantly in the entire group of
100 patients during 1 year. Weight gain
correlated both with the increase in blood
pressure and with an increase in the LDL
762
Yki-Jarvinen
Table 4Changes in glycosylated hemoglobin and serum triglycerides during treatment with insulin alone as compared with insulin combination therapy in previously insulin-treated patients
Ref.
no.
Combination
regimen
24
42
43
57
Metformin
MET insulin
MET insulin
MET insulin
MET insulin
Weighted mean
45
46
26
47
48
61
51
Sulfonylurea
GLYB insulin
SU insulin
GLYB insulin
TOLAZ insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
GLYB insulin
Weighted mean
52
54
Glitazones
TRO insulin
ROSI insulin
Weighted mean
65
-Glucosidase inhibitor
ACARB insulin
Duration
(months)
Baseline Change Baseline Change Baseline Change Baseline Change Better Better
in S-Tg regimen regimen
S-Tg
in S-Tg
HbA1c in HbA1c HbA1c in HbA1c S-Tg
glycemia
S-Tg
Comb Comb
Ins
Ins
Ins
Ins
Comb
Comb
6
4
6
3
9
9.6
11.5
8.9
9.8
1.6
0.0
0.2
0.5
0.6
9.1
9.6
11.7
8.9
10.0
2.5
1.9
1.9
1.1
1.9
2.5
2.4
2.8
2.2
2.5
0.4
0.1
0.0
1.0
0.4
2.3
2.0
2.9
2.2
2.4
0.1
0.4
0.3
0.9
0.4
NS
Comb
Comb
NS
Comb
Comb
Comb
Comb
3
12
4
3
11
4
2
6.7
10.2
9.2*
10.7*
10.3
10.4
14.0*
10.1
0.4
2.4
0.1
1.5
1.3
0.0
0.6
1.0
6.3
9.8
9.2*
10.7*
11.1
10.9
14.0*
10.1
0.3
2.3
0.9
1.9
2.0
1.3
1.0
1.4
1.5
2.3
1.2
2.1
1.7
1.4
2.1
1.8
0.08
0.6
0.1
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.4
0.1
1.5
2.5
1.2
2.1
2.4
1.8
2.1
2.0
0.2
0.8
0.1
0.5
0.7
0.1
0.2
0.2
NS
NS
Ins
Comb
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
Comb
Comb
NS
Comb
Comb
6
6
8.9
9.4
9.2
0.1
0.1
0.0
9.0
9.3
9.2
1.2
0.4
1.3
2.6
3.0
2.8
0.5
0.3
0.1
2.5
2.7
2.6
0.1
0.4
0.2
NS
NS
Comb
Comb
8.7
0.1
8.8
0.6
2.1
2.2
Comb
Comb
The trials are grouped as in Table 3. Only trials lasting at least 2 months are included. *HbA1; statistically significant difference between insulin combination therapy
versus insulin alone; serum triglycerides 120 min after a standardized meal challenge; significant difference at the end versus start of the treatment period. There
were no significant differences between changes in serum triglycerides with insulin alone versus insulin combination therapy. Abbreviations as in Tables 2 and 3.
PREDICTORS OF A
GLYCEMIC RESPONSE TO
INSULIN COMBINATION
THERAPY
In studies in which the insulin dose is titrated aggressively to reach glycemic targets, the decrease in HbA1c will be directly
proportional to its initial level. Of other
factors, obesity predicts a poor response
to any type of insulin therapy, especially if
insufficient doses of insulin are used
(30,38). In addition, and as discussed
above, GADA may predict poor response
to combination therapy.
PRACTICAL ALGORITHM TO
INITIATE INSULIN THERAPY
Initiation of insulin therapy on an ambulatory basis in type 2 diabetic patients has
been shown to be as safe and effective as
an inpatient program (39). Regardless of
the insulin treatment regimen chosen, the
insulin dose should be adjusted to reach
glycemic targets. Considering the large
interindividual variation in insulin re763
lin combination therapy with NPH or insulin glargine is used. However, because
especially NPH insulin is unable to adequately control postdinner glycemia, fasting glucose must be in the normal range
(4 6 mmol/l) for average glycemic control, measured using HbA1c to be 7.5%.
A simple method of initiating insulin therapy, developed based on experience from
the FINFAT study, is shown in Table 5 (12).
The patient is assumed to be insulin-nave
and on maximal doses of sulfonylureas
and metformin. The recommendation to
discontinue the sulfonylurea (glyburide)
but not metformin after insulin combination therapy is started is based on the inability of some patients to adequately
titrate the dose of bedtime NPH because
of hypoglycemia (12). An increase in mild
hypoglycemias was also reported by Riddle and Schneider (25) with glimepiride
combined with a single injection of 30/70
insulin at 6:00 P.M. compared with two injections of 30/70 insulin. Hypoglycemias
may not be a problem with peakless insulins such as insulin glargine (40). Discontinuation of sulfonylurea when insulin
therapy is started may retard achievement
of good glycemic control unless the insulin dose is rapidly increased (12,25).
Glitazones could be an additional or alternative component in the oral hypoglycemic agent regimen, but there are no
studies in insulin-nave patients.
Figure 2Upper panel: Diurnal glucose profiles after 52 weeks of treatment of 423 patients
using oral hypoglycemic agents with either insulin glargine (F) or NPH (E). Lower panel: The
percentage of patients experiencing any symptomatic hypoglycemia (ALL) or nocturnal hypoglycemia (NOCTURNAL) in the same study (40).
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Against the emerging epidemic of type 2 diabetes, studies comparing different insulin
treatment regimens are sparse and include
only a small number of patients treated for a
maximum of 1 year (Tables 1 and 2). Data
on effects of insulin-combination therapy
versus insulin alone on diabetic microvascular and macrovascular complications are
nonexistent. The main reason for the paucity of data may be the reluctance of private
funding agencies to support studies using
pharmacological agents and the reluctance
of industry to support studies with established preparations. The development
of new agents such as glitazones and
insulin analogs have increased the number of patients included in various trials,
but many company-initiated trials are designed to fulfill licensing requirements
and must be performed in multiple centers to save time. Although some company-initiated trials are of superb quality,
others suffer from inadequate glycemic
control and may lack the comparisons the
DIABETES CARE, VOLUME 24, NUMBER 4, APRIL 2001
Yki-Jarvinen
Table 5Studies comparing insulin combination regimens with different insulin injection regimens in type 2 diabetic patients (oral agents
similar in all regimens)
Reference
no.
Regimen 1
Regimen 2
Glycemia
Weight gain
Hypoglycemia
208
28
No difference
No difference
No difference
Less with bedtime NPH
15
214
32
34
14
No difference
No difference
33
31
32
Bedtime NPH SU
Bedtime NPH SU
Bedtime NPH SU
24
39
135
Morning NPH SU
3 regular SU
3 lispro SU
24
41
139
No difference
No difference
No difference
No difference
Less with bedtime NPH
Less with bedtime NPH
40
15
*OHA, oral hypoglycemic agents, 59% SU MET, no differences in OHA between groups using NPH versus insulin glargine; statistically significant difference
between regimen 1 and regimen 2.
(12), as does the use of the peakless longacting insulin analog insulin glargine
compared with NPH (40). These considerations and the need to treat not only
hyperglycemia but also other risk factors
in type 2 diabetes support the use of simple insulin combination regimens such as
insulin glargine and metformin and or a
sulfonylurea (40). The prevailing view
that patients who are poorly responsive to
such a regimen benefit from adding additional insulin injections is not supported
by existing data. Instead, special emphasis should be placed on increasing the
dose of the single long-acting insulin to a
Table 6Simple algorithm to start insulin combination therapy in an insulin-naive patient treated with oral combination therapy
Objectives
Visit1, before start of insulin therapy
Teach home-glucose monitoring
Correct gross errors in diet
Visit 0, initiation of insulin therapy
Stop sulfonylurea, continue metformin 2 g/day
Teach insulin injection technique
Define initial dose of insulin (glargine, NPH or 30/70 at
6:00 P.M. or later)
Give written instructions regarding self-adjustment of the
insulin dose
Teach symptoms of hypoglycemias
Schedule a phone call after 1 week and visit after 24 weeks
Subsequent visits
Individualize frequencyconsider electronic transfer of home
glucosemonitoring
Results and phone calls instead of outpatient visits
Details
Home glucose monitoring
Measure fasting glucose daily during first weeks or months; after
reaching target frequency can be even once a week
Initial dose of insulin (insulin glargine, NPH, or ultralente)
Irrelevant if adjusted by patient
Safe starting dose fasting glucose (mmol/l). i.e., 10 IU if fasting
glucose is 10 mmol/l
Self-adjustment of insulin doses
If fasting glucose exceeds 5.5 mmol/l (100 mg/dl) on three consecutive measurements, increase bedtime insulin dose by 2 IU
During combination therapy with NPH and oral agents
(ref. FINFAT), or fasting glucose of 6 mmol/l corresponds to
7.5% HbA1c
*There are no data on use of glitazones in combination therapy with insulin in insulin-naive patients; based on the FINFAT study, in which glyburide and NPH
insulin were used and use of this combination prevented adequate titration of the insulin dose (12); a higher incidence of symptoms of mild hypoglycemia was found
using glimepiride combined with 30/70 insulin given at 6:00 P.M. Similar problems were not reported in another study in which glimepiride was combined with
30 70 insulin at 6:00 P.M. (25) and may not be a problem with insulin glargine (40). Note that stopping a sulfonylurea necessitates a rapid increase in the insulin
dose, which can be performed by teaching the patient self-adjustment of the insulin dose.
765
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