Oral Diabetes Medications
Oral Diabetes Medications
REVIEW OF ORAL DIABETES MEDICATIONS
by Peter J. Nebergall, PhD
Currently there are an estimated 16 million
diabetics in the United States. Perhaps 10 percent are
insulin-dependent; the rest are type II diabetics, controlling
their condition with diet, exercise, and oral medications.
Oral medications are not insulin pills, rather
four classes of drugs designed to improve the body's utilization
of what insulin is still present. These are: The sulfonylureas,
metformin, troglitazone, and acarbose.
Most "diabetes pills" are
sulfonylureas, a class of chemicals that stimulate the pancreas
to produce more insulin, effectively lowering blood glucose
levels. Type II diabetics, those who need better management than
diet and exercise can provide, often turn to these medications:
tolbutamide, chlorpropamide, tolazamide, glyburide, glipizide,
and new glimepiride for effective self-management. The
sulfonylureas are effective, but only so long as the pancreas
maintains some of its insulin-making capacity.
But the sulfonylureas grow ever less effective
with the passage of time. They drive the failing pancreas to
greater effort, but the patient may well require ever-increasing
doses. At some point, no further increase in medication will be
effective; the pancreas isn't doing its job, and the patient
needs to start injecting insulin. When the islet cells of the
pancreas stop making sufficient insulin, insulin must be
injected.
Metformin, the second of the oral diabetes
medications, works to raise the body's sensitivity to its own
insulin. Used for decades in Europe, it can be prescribed alone
or with the sulfonylureas. Metformin helps the type II diabetic
make better use of the insulin he or she has left. Like the
sulfonylureas, it becomes useless when the pancreas ceases
producing adequate insulin.
Troglitazone (trade name Rezulin, from
Parke-Davis) is the third oral medication. Rezulin directly
attacks the problem of insulin resistance, the increasing
inability to process insulin, that is the chief component of type
II diabetes. In tests, Rezulin enabled many diabetics to reduce
volume and frequency of insulin injections. A few were able to
discontinue insulin injections entirely.
Initially, Rezulin was tested and approved for
use with insulin-using type II diabetics. As tests continued, it
became clear that it was also an effective blood glucose reducer
either alone (in combination with diet and exercise) or in
combination with a sulfonylurea, for type II diabetics who did
not need insulin (although not a replacement for the
sulfonylureas). On August 4, 1997, the Food and Drug
Administration approved Rezulin for these new uses.
As with other oral diabetes medications,
Rezulin's effectiveness depends on the presence of insulin. If
sufficient insulin is not present, it must be injected, and
Rezulin therapy will not change that fact. Where insulin supply
rather than insulin resistance is the issue (as in type I
diabetes), Rezulin therapy offers nothing. Investigations
continue, and new uses may come with time. "Because of its
mechanism of action," states Parke-Davis, "Rezulin is
active only in the presence of insulin. Therefore, Rezulin should
not be used in type I diabetes or for the treatment of diabetic
ketoacidosis."
Published data state that although degree of
renal insufficiency has no effect on Rezulin dosage, persons with
hepatic (liver) disease should exercise caution. Other data warn
that in premenopausal anovulatory women, Rezulin therapy may
result in resumption of ovulation, and risk of pregnancy. There
is further recommendation to proceed with caution if the
individual is taking antirejection drugs such as cyclosporine or
tacrolimus.
Acarbose, the fourth of the current "oral
meds" is completely different. A carbohydrase inhibitor, it
temporarily suppresses the digestive enzymes which turn
carbohydrate into glucose, slowing digestion and glucose
absorption, keeping glucose levels more even. More a management
tool than an antidote to insulin shortage, acarbose helps some
diabetics keep a more constant blood glucose level. A
"temperamental" medication, it has many side effects,
and is less than universal in its utility.
Problems
Unfortunately, oral medications are often
eventually insufficient. Many type II diabetics, diagnosed as
young adults, at first successfully control their condition with
diet and exercise, but find they need the pills as they grow
older. A number of years (and dosage increases) later, these
diabetics have reached the limit of what oral medications can do
for them; they are "maxed out," and really need to
start injecting insulin. (Note: Regular, frequent blood glucose
monitoring will show if you have reached the point where you
should begin insulin therapy.)
Here we encounter what the drug companies call
"psychological insulin resistance." Some of this is
plain old fear of sticking yourself with needles--nurtured by
memories from our childhood in the bad old days of dull-as-nails
reusable syringes! Many men would rather face a bayonet. But some
doctors contribute to the problem when they don't make it clear
to the patient what the high glucose levels consequent to
remaining on now-useless oral medications will bring in their
wake. Yes, insulin is a powerful medication, with risks if used
incorrectly--but what in this world DOESN'T have risks if used
incorrectly? The risks of remaining on oral diabetes medications
once pancreatic insulin has diminished or ceased entirely are far
greater than the risks of taking insulin.
Oral Insulin?
Recent reports have mentioned insulin
administration by mouth. The nature of insulin, and of human
digestion, make oral administration of insulin ineffective for
blood glucose management--the insulin is digested before it can
reach the bloodstream. The oral insulin administration here noted
is taking place as part of several diabetes prevention trials. In
one example, individuals considered at high risk for developing
diabetes (but not yet "diabetic") are given oral
insulin in an effort to misdirect their body's autoimmune attack
on the Beta cells of the pancreas. Oral insulin, very
"investigational" at this time, is not currently an
option for blood glucose management.
The Future
Researchers at Johns Hopkins are testing
aminoguanidine, a new medication that may prevent or reduce some
of the ramifications of diabetes. Ergo Scientific Company's
Ergoset, currently in Phase III clinicals, appears to reduce the
high plasma lipid levels common in type II diabetes, and thus the
risk of diabetic heart disease. Swedish and American researchers
are testing still another (APO A1 MILANO, covered in VOICE Volume
10, Number 4) that may help reduce diabetic heart disease.
Aerosol spray insulin (for nasal administration) is being tested,
and may someday supplant injection. Trental (pentoxifyline, from
Hoechst Marion Roussel) is now available to treat
"intermittent claudication," a painful circulatory
ailment and frequent companion of peripheral neuropathy. ACE
inhibitors, a class of blood pressure medications like Capoten
(Captopril), have been proven to deter and retard diabetic kidney
complications. Other oral medications are constantly being
evaluated for possible diabetic applications. Change is coming
quickly.
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