Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine (Jul 2022)

Ultra‐long‐acting recombinant insulin for the treatment of diabetes mellitus in dogs

  • Sean E. Hulsebosch,
  • Jully Pires,
  • Michael J. Bannasch,
  • Thomas Lancaster,
  • Andrea Delpero,
  • Ramya Ragupathy,
  • Sylaja Murikipudi,
  • Todd Zion,
  • Chen Gilor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16449
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36, no. 4
pp. 1211 – 1219

Abstract

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Abstract Background For the treatment of diabetes mellitus (DM) in dogs, novel insulins with decreased injection frequency while maintaining safety and efficacy are desirable. Insulin fused with immunoglobulin‐fragment‐crystallizable (Fc) has an ultra‐long plasma half‐life because it recycles through cells, protected from proteolysis. Hypothesis Glycemic control can be achieved in diabetic dogs with a recombinant fusion protein of a synthetic insulin and canine Fc (AKS‐218d) administered subcutaneously once‐weekly. Animals Five client‐owned dogs with naturally occurring DM. Methods Prospective clinical trial in dogs with DM that were recruited from the UC Davis Veterinary Teaching Hospital and local veterinary clinics. Dogs previously controlled using intermediate‐acting insulin q12h were transitioned to once‐weekly injections of a preliminary construct identified as AKS‐218d. The dose of AKS‐218d was titrated weekly for 8 weeks based on clinical response and continuous interstitial glucose monitoring. Clinical signs, body weight, serum fructosamine concentrations, and mean interstitial glucose concentrations (IG) over the preceding week were compared between baseline (before AKS‐218d) and during the last week of treatment. Data were compared using nonparametric paired tests. Results Once‐weekly AKS‐218d, compared to baseline twice‐daily insulin therapy, resulted in no significant changes in clinical signs, median (range) body weight (+0.4 kg [−0.5‐1.1]; P = .6), fructosamine concentration (−75 mmol/L [−215 to +126]; P = .4), or mean IG (+81 mg/dL [−282 to +144]; P = .8). No adverse reactions were reported. Conclusion Control of clinical signs, body weight, and maintenance of glycemia was achieved with this once‐weekly novel insulin construct in 4 of 5 dogs.

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