Health & Medical Diabetes

Antidiabetic Treatment With Gliptins and CV Outcomes

Antidiabetic Treatment With Gliptins and CV Outcomes

Abstract


The traditional oral pharmacological therapy for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) has been based on the prescription of metformin, a biguanide, as first line antihyperglycemic agent world over. It has been demonstrated that after 3 years of treatment, approximately 50 % of diabetic patients could achieve acceptable glucose levels with monotherapy; but by 9 years this had declined to only 25 %. Therefore, the implementation of a combined pharmacological therapy acting via different pathways becomes necessary, and its combination with a compound of the sulfonylurea group was along decades the most frequently employed prescription in routine clinical practice. Meglitinides, glitazones and alpha-glucosidase inhibitors were subsequently developed, but the five mentioned groups of oral antihyperglycemic agents are associated with variable degrees of undesirable or even severe cardiovascular events. The gliptins—also called dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP4) inhibitors—are an additional group of antidiabetic compounds with increasing clinical use. We review the status of the gliptins with emphasis on their capabilities to positively or negatively affect the cardiovascular system, and their potential involvement in major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). Alogliptin, anagliptin, linagliptin, saxagliptin, sitagliptin, teneligliptin and vildagliptin are the compounds currently in clinical use. Regardless differences in chemical structure and metabolic pathways, gliptins as a group exert favorable changes in experimental models. These changes, as an almost general rule, include improved endothelial function, reduction of inflammatory markers, oxidative stress ischemia/reperfusion injury and atherogenesis. In addition, increased adiponectin levels and modest decreases in lipidemia and blood pressure were reported. In clinical settings, several trials—notably the longer one, employing sitagliptin, with a mean follow-up period of 3 years—did not show an increased risk for ischemic events. Anyway, it should be emphasized that the encouraging results from basic science were not yet translated into clinical evidence, probably due the multiple and pleiotropic enzymatic effects of DPP4 inhibition. Moreover, when employing saxagliptin, while the drug was not associated with an augmented risk for ischemic events, it should be pinpointed that the rate of hospitalization for heart failure was significantly increased. Gliptins as a group constitute a widely accepted therapy for the management of T2DM, usually as a second-line medication. Nonetheless, for the time being, a definite relationship between gliptins treatment and improved cardiovascular outcomes remains uncertain and needs yet to be proven.

SHARE
RELATED POSTS on "Health & Medical"
New Information on Type 2 Diabetes
New Information on Type 2 Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes - Preventing Gestational Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes - Preventing Gestational Diabetes
Diabetes 2 Treatment- A Time to Act
Diabetes 2 Treatment- A Time to Act
FDA Approves New Diabetes Drug Symlin
FDA Approves New Diabetes Drug Symlin
About Insulin
About Insulin
Gestational Diabetes Diet Plan
Gestational Diabetes Diet Plan
How To Treat Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis (fsgs) Effectively
How To Treat Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis (fsgs) Effectively
Study Explains Why Diabetics Face High Risk From Angioplasty
Study Explains Why Diabetics Face High Risk From Angioplasty
Diabetic Testing Supplies
Diabetic Testing Supplies
Diabetes - 5 Ways to Save Money on Medicine
Diabetes - 5 Ways to Save Money on Medicine
Diabetes and Exercise
Diabetes and Exercise
Use of U-500 Insulin in Continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion
Use of U-500 Insulin in Continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion
Alternative Health - 7 Tips to Help With Your Weight Loss and Type 2 Diabetes
Alternative Health - 7 Tips to Help With Your Weight Loss and Type 2 Diabetes
A Guide to Symptoms of Diabetes
A Guide to Symptoms of Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes Treatment Victoza Helps Type 1, Too
Type 2 Diabetes Treatment Victoza Helps Type 1, Too
Blood Sugar Level
Blood Sugar Level
What is Monavie?
What is Monavie?
Diabetic Muscle Infarction: A Systematic Review
Diabetic Muscle Infarction: A Systematic Review
How Is an Epidemiological Study Carried Out?
How Is an Epidemiological Study Carried Out?
We Can Change the Natural History of Type 2 Diabetes
We Can Change the Natural History of Type 2 Diabetes

Leave Your Reply

*