Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2018)

Short Course of Insulin Treatment versus Metformin in Newly Diagnosed Patients with Type 2 Diabetes

  • Marta Seghieri,
  • Eleni Rebelos,
  • Andrea Mari,
  • Luigi Sciangula,
  • Carlo Giorda,
  • Ele Ferrannini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm7090235
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 9
p. 235

Abstract

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The ß-cell dysfunction of type 2 diabetes is partly reversible. The optimal time window to induce glycemic remission is uncertain; short courses of insulin treatment have been tested as a strategy to induce remission. In a pilot study in 38 newly-diagnosed patients, we assessed the time-course of insulin sensitivity and ß-cell function (by repeat oral glucose tolerance tests) following a 6-week basal insulin treatment compared to metformin monotherapy in equipoised glycemic control. At 6 weeks, insulin secretion and sensitivity were increased in both groups whilst ß-cell glucose sensitivity was unchanged. From this time onwards, in the insulin group glycemia started to rise at 3 months, and was no longer different from baseline at 1 year. The initial improvement in insulin secretion and sensitivity dissipated. In the metformin group, fasting plasma glucose and HbA1c levels reached a nadir at 8 months, at which time insulin secretion, glucose and insulin sensitivity were significantly better than at baseline and higher than in the insulin group. A short course of basal insulin in newly-diagnosed patients does not appear to offer clinical advantage over recommended initiation with metformin.

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