Erschienen in:
01.04.2007 | Original Article
Delay Of Insulin Addition To Oral Combination Therapy Despite Inadequate Glycemic Control
Delay of Insulin Therapy
verfasst von:
Gregory A. Nichols, PhD, Yuri H. Koo, JD, MPH, Sonali N. Shah, RPh, MBA, MPH
Erschienen in:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
|
Ausgabe 4/2007
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Abstract
BACKGROUND
Patients and providers may be reluctant to escalate to insulin therapy despite inadequate glycemic control.
OBJECTIVES
To determine the proportion of patients attaining and maintaining glycemic targets after initiating sulfonylurea and metformin oral combination therapy (SU/MET); to assess insulin initiation among patients failing SU/MET; and to estimate the glycemic burden incurred, stratified by whether HbA1c goal was attained and maintained.
DESIGN
Longitudinal observational cohort study.
SUBJECTS
Type 2 diabetes patients, 3,891, who newly initiated SU/MET between 1 January 1996 and 31 December 2000.
MEASUREMENTS
Subjects were followed until insulin was added, health plan disenrolment, or until 31 December 2005. We calculated the number of months subjects continued SU/MET therapy alone, in total, and during periods of inadequate glycemic control; the A1C reached during those time periods; and total glycemic burden, defined as the estimated cumulative monthly difference between measured A1C and 8%.
RESULTS
During a mean follow-up of 54.6 ± 28.6 months, 41.9% of the subjects added insulin, and 11.8% received maximal doses of both oral agents. Over half of SU/MET patients attained but failed to maintain A1C of 8%, yet continued SU/MET therapy for an average of nearly 3 years, sustaining glycemic burden equivalent to nearly 32 months of A1C levels of 9%. Another 18% of patients never attained the 8% goal with SU/MET, yet continued that therapy for an average of 30 months, reaching mean A1C levels of 10%.
CONCLUSIONS
Despite inadequate glycemic control, a minority of patients added insulin or maximized oral agent doses, thus, incurring substantial glycemic burden on SU/MET. Additional studies are needed to examine the benefits of rapid titration to maximum doses and earlier initiation of insulin therapy.