Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1999; 107: S115-S119
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1212164
© J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Rapid-acting insulin secretagogues: a clinical need?

P. D. Home
  • Newcastle Diabetes Centre, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
14 July 2009 (online)

Summary

The history of achieving adequate insulin secretion in Type 2 diabetes has interesting parallels with Type 1 diabetes. Initial insulin secretagogue therapy involved short-acting sulphonylureas - tolbutamide being introduced 40 years ago - and early insulin therapy used unmodified (soluble) insulin. Subsequently, long-acting sulphonylureas and insulin were introduced, but more recently short-acting agents have become popular again. This approach was endorsed by the European non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus guidelines of 1989/1993. The trend at present is to match modern rapid-acting agents (such as repaglinide or the rapid-acting insulin analogues) to physiological mealtime insulin requirements in both types of diabetes.

The fundamental reasons for tailoring therapy to mealtimes fall into two categories: a pathophysiological rationale and a behavioural rationale. The pathophysiological rationale for tailoring treatment to mealtimes is based on the importance of restoring the mealtime insulin secretion profiles of patients with Type 2 diabetes to physiological levels to reestablish the tight control of blood glucose levels seen in healthy individuals. The behavioural rationale is derived from the observation that most people with Type 2 diabetes are overweight and would like to reduce calorie consumption, but that the risk of hypoglycaemia does not allow them to be flexible over their day-to-day calorie intake.

These observations suggest that the matching of a mealtime pharmacodynamic profile to a patient's eating habits would provide a knowledge-based rationale for achieving good blood glucose control once dietary means alone are inadequate. Evidently, this can be usefully combined with other pharmacological approaches (insulin sensitizers or basal insulin). The need for combination therapy is increasingly likely as the defect in insulin secretion progresses.

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