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ADIS DRUG EVALUATION Drugs 1998 Apr 55 (d): 563-584 0012-6667/98/C004.0563/S22.00/0 © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. Glimepiride A Review of its Use in the Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Heather D. Langtry and Julia A. Balfour Adis International Limited, Auckland, New Zealand Various sections of the manuscript reviewed by: J. Eckel, Diabetes-Forschunginstitut, Dusseldorf, Germany; L.C. Groop, Department of Endocrinology, Lund University, Malmo General Hospital, Malmo, Sweden; A.D.B. Harrower, Department of Medicine, Monklands Hospital, Airdrie, Scotland; R.J. Heine, Afdeling Endocrinologie, Academisch Ziekenhuis, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; O.K. Matthews, Oxford Diabetes and Endocrinology Centre, The Radcliffe Infirmary NHS Trust, Oxford, England; W. Waldhausl, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Internal Medicine III, Allgemeines Krankenhaus der Stadt Wien, Vienna, Austria. Contents Summary ...................................................................................................................................... 563 1. Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 566 2. Pharmacodynamic Properties ......................................................................................................... 567 2.1 Pancreatic Effects ................................................................................................................... 567 2.1.1 Effects on Pancreatic -Cells .................. . ................................................................. 567 2.1.2 Effects on Blood Glucose Levels and Insulin Secretion .................................................. 567 2.2 ExtrapancreaticEffects ............................................ .. . . . . . . . ............................................. 569 2.3 Cardiovascular Effects ............................................................................................................. 570 3. Pharmacokinetic Properties and Drug Interactions .............. .......................................................... 571 3.1 Absorption and Distribution ..................................... .. . ........................................................•571 3.2 Metabolism and Excretion.................................................................................................... !572 3.3 Pharmacokinetics in Special Populations ............................................. ................................. 573 3.4 Drug Interactions ..................................................................................................................... 573 4. Clinical Efficacy ............................................................................................................................... 575 4.1 Dose-Ranging Studies and Comparisons with Placebo.......................................................... .:575 4.2 Comparisons with Other Sulphonylureas ................................................. ............................... 576 4.2.1 Comparisons with Glibenclamide (Glyburide) ........................................................... 576 4.2.2 Comparison with Gliclazide ........................................................................................... 577 4.2.3 Comparison with Glipizide ............................................................................................. 578 4.3 Combination with Insulin .......................................................................................................... 578 5. Tolerability ........................................................................................................................................ 579 6. Dosage and Administralion ............................................................................................................. 580 7. Place of Glimepiride in the Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus ........................................... 581 Summary Synopsis Drugs 1998 Apr:; 55 (4) Glimepiride is a sulphonylurea agent that Stimulates insulin release from pancreatic -cells and may act via extrapancreatic mechanisms. It is administered once daily to patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellilus in whom glycaemia is not controlled by diet and exercise alone, and may be combined with insulin in patients with secondary sulphonylurea failure. Langtry & Balfour 564 The greatest blood glucose lowering effects of glimepiride occur in the first 4 hours after the dose. Glimepiride has fewer and less severe effects on cardiovascular variables than glibenclamide (glyburide). Pharmacokinetics are mainly unaltered in elderly patients or those with renal or liver disease. Few drug interactions with glimepiride have been documented. In patients with type 2 diabetes, glimepiride has an effective dosage range of 0.5 to 8 mg/day, although there is little difference in efficacy between dosages of 4 and 8 mg/day. Glimepiride was similar in efficacy to glibenclamide and glipi-zide in 1-year studies. However, glimepiride appears to reduce blood glucose more rapidly than glipizide over the first few weeks of treatment. Glimepiride and gliclazide were compared in patients with good glycaemic control at baseline in a 14-week study that noted no differences between their effects. Glimepiride plus insulin was as effective as insulin plus placebo in helping patients with secondary sulphonylurea failure to reach a fasting blood glucose target level of 7.8 mmol/L, although lower insulin dosages and more rapid effects on glycaemia were seen with glimepiride. Although glimepiride monotherapy was generally well tolerated, hypoglycaemia occurred in 10 to 20% of patients treated for 1 year and 50% of patients receiving concomitant insulin for 6 months. Pooled clinical trial data suggest that glimepiride may have a lower incidence of hypoglycaemia than glibenclamide, particularly in the first month of treatment. Dosage is usually started at 1 mg/day, titrated to glycaemic control at 1- to 2-week intervals to a usual dosage range of 1 to 4 mg/day (maximum 6 mg/day in the UK or 8 mg/day in the US). Conclusions. Glimepiride is a conveniently administered alternative to other sulphonylureus in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus not well controlled by diet alone. Its possible tolerability advantages and use in combination with other oral antidiabetic drugs require further study. Glimepiride is also reported to reduce exogenous insulin requirements in patients with secondary sulphonylurea failure when administered in combination with insulin. Pharmacodynamic Properties Glimepiride acts at ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels on pancreatic -cells to promote insulin release. It binds to 65kD protein on -cells, which appears to be a part of the same sulphonylurea receptor that binds glibenclamide. Glimepiride decreases gluco-/hexokinase binding to porin proteins and increases expression of glucokinase mRNA and the glucose transporter GLUT2 in pancreatic cells in vitro. The maximum effects of glimepiride (relative to placebo) on blood glucose and insulin levels in patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mel-litus appear during the first 4 hours after the dose. Over this 4-hour period, greater reductions in blood glucose occurred on the 4th day of treatment with glimepiride 2 mg/day than glibenclamide 10.5 mg/day (6.0 vs 5.1 mmol/L, p<0.05). A weak relationship between blood glucose response and dosage was seen in patients with type 2 diabetes receiving glimepiride 1 to 8 mg/day. Glimepiride increased or did not change glucose utilisation rates in patients with type 2 diabetes in euglycae-mic hyperinsulinaemic clamp studies. Glimepiride was also associated with greater reductions in insulinaemia than glibenclamide during exercise, despite similar reductions in blood glucose. Glimepiride may be given before or with breakfast, with equivalent effect. Effects of glimepiride on extrapancreatic mechanisms appear to be similar to those of other sulphonylureas. The drug appears to act within peripheral cells at © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Glimepiride: A Review 565 a point after insulin receptor interaction, increasing glucose transport and glucose transporter expression (GLUT1 and GLUT4), lipogenesis and glyccgenesis. Glimepiride also appeared to reduce insulin resistance and increase hepatic glucose disposal in animal models, but did not alter glucose utilisation in patients with type 1 diabetes: these observations require further confirmation. Unlike glibenclamide, glimepiride has few effects on cardiovascular variables, with no effects on diazoxide-induced KATP channel opening in human volunteers. It also has more modest effects on vasculature and heart function (ST segment changes and blood pressure) in in vitro and animal studies than glibenclamide. Pharmacokinetic Properties and Drug Interactions Clinical Efficacy After oral administration, glimepiride is completely absorbed, reaching peak plasma concentrations (Cmax) of 103.2 and 550.8 g/L and areas under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) of 326 and 2634 g/L • h after 1 and 8mg doses, respectively. The time to Cmax (tmax) was 2.4 to 3.75 hours in patients with type 2 diabetes. Plasma protein binding was 99.4% and the volume of distribution was 8.8L. Accumulation does not occur after multiple doses. The drug is metabolised mostly in the liver by CYP2C9 to the active MI (hydroxy) metabolite, with further dehydrogenation to the inactive M2 (carboxy) metabolite. Ml has a tmax of 1.5 to 4.5 hours. 37 to 52% of a glimepiride dose is found in the urine as Ml or M2 within 48 hours. Clearance (CL) was 2.7 to 3.4 L/h for the parent drug and 8.6 to 10.2 L/h for Ml. Over 1 to 8mg doses, the terminal elimination half-life (t'/2 ) of the parent drug increased from 3.2 to 8.8 hours, but the all-phase half-life was 1.2 to 1.5 hours. Pharmacokinetics are similar in elderly and younger patients. Although CL tended to increase in patients with renal impairment as creatinine clearance decreased from 3 to 0.6 L/h, the t'/2 was unaffected. The urinary excretion of Ml may be reduced, but no other pharmacokinetic changes are known to occur during liver disease. Glimepiride does not appear to have clinically significant interactions with warfarin, cimetidine, ranitidine or propranolol. Although not specifically studied, interactions may theoretically exist between glimepiride and other highly protein bound drugs, -blockers, calcium channel blockers, estrogen, fibrates, statins, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, thyroid hormone or sulphonamides, warranting caution during concomitant use. In dose-finding and placebo-controlled studies, the minimum effective dosage of glimepiride (0.5 mg/day) had significantly greater effects than placebo on fasting plasma glucose (FPG, -2.5 vs -1.0 mmol/L) and postprandial glucose (PPG, -4.9 vs -1.7 mmol/L) in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus treated for 2 weeks. Clear dose-response differences in FPG, PPG and glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) were seen between glimepiride 1 mg/day and 4 to 8 mg/day in a 14week study, but the differences were more modest between the latter 2 dosages. However, in a 14-week study, glimepiride 16 mg/day was no more effective in reducing FPG from baseline than 8 mg/day. Once-daily administration was as effective as twice-daily use at dosages of 6 and 8 mg/day. Glimepiride 1 to 8 mg/day was as effective after 1 year as glibenclamide 1.25 to 20 mg/day in reducing FPG, HbA1c or PPG. In 3 trials, differences in FPG and HbA1c levels between glimepiride and glibenclamide were minor and inconsistent, and efficacy of these 2 agents was equivalent; however, lower fasting insulin and C-peptide levels occurred with glimepiride. Long term extension of 2 of these trials for up to 2.8 years showed no clinically significant differences in efficacy between glimepiride and glibenclamide. Glimepiride 1 to 4 mg/day and gliclazide © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. Drugs 1998 Apr: 55 (4) 566 Langtry & Balfour 80 to 320 mg/day had similar efficacy in patients with good glycaemic control at baseline (FPG =6.3 mmol/L, HbA1c 5%); glimepiride 1 mg was generally equivalent to gliclazide 80mg. However, the mild disease and short (14-week) duration of study made differences between treatments more difficult to find; further comparisons between glimepiride and gliclazide are needed. Glimepiride and glipizide were equivalent in efficacy, decreasing FPG and HbA1c after 1 year's treatment; however, glimepiride reduced FPG more rapidly during the first 10 weeks of study. Insulin added to maximal dosages of glimepiride was compared with insulin plus placebo in a 24-week study in obese patients with secondary sulphonylurea failure. Patients in both groups achieved similar FPG and HbA1c levels at end-point (7.6 mmol/L and 7.6%). However, patients in the glimepiride plus insulin group required lower insulin dosages (49 vs 78 U/day) and achieved more rapid lowering of FPG after 2 and 4 weeks of treatment than the insulin/placebo group. Tolerability Dosage and Administration The most common treatment-emergent adverse events with glimepiride are dizziness, headache, asthenia and nausea; the drug is generally well tolerated. In comparative trials, common adverse events appeared more often during treatment with glimepiride than with placebo, occurred in similar proportions of glimepiride and glipizide patients, and were less likely to occur with glimepiride than glibenclamide, although these differences were not confirmed by statistical analysis. Serious adverse events also followed this pattern, occurring in 8, 2, 8.8 and 12.4% of glimepiride, placebo, glipizide and glibenclamide recipients, respectively. Serious adverse events were usually not thought to be glimepiride related. In the US comparative trials, hypoglycaemia symptoms occurred in more patients receiving glimepiride than placebo (13.9 vs 2%), in similar percentages of glimepiride and gliclazide recipients (21.2 vs 20.6%) and in fewer glimepiride than glibenclamide patients (10 vs 16.3%). The incidence of hypoglycaemia was 1.7% with glimepiride and 5.6% with glibenclamide during the first month of therapy. Mild hypoglycaemia was more common during glimepiride plus insulin treatment (51%) than with placebo plus insulin (37%) in a 6-month study, but moderate hypoglycaemia was not ( 1 1 vs 15%). Glimepiride is started at a dose of 1 to 2mg once daily with breakfast. Regular blood glucose and HbA1c level monitoring is used to guide therapy. Dosages are titrated every 1 to 2 weeks until glycaemic control or maximum dosages (8 mg/day in the US, 6 mg/day in the UK) are reached. Usual maintenance dosages are 1 to 4 mg/day. In the US, glimepiride 8 mg/day may be combined with insulin in patients with secondary sulphonylurea failure. Patients receiving other sulphonylureas may be switched to glimepiride without a transition period. Glimepiride may be used cautiously in elderly, malnourished or debilitated patients and those with renal or hepatic insufficiency, but is not recommended for use in children or in pregnant or breastfeeding women. 1. Introduction Glimepiride (fig. 1) is a sulphonylurea antihyperglycaemic agent that may be given in a single daily dose. It acts by stimulating insulin release from pancreatic -cells and possibly also via ex© Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. trapancreatic mechanisms. This review examines its pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics and therapeutic use as monotherapy in comparison with other sulphonylureas or placebo in patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus, as well as its combination with exogenous insulin Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Glimepiride: A Review 567 Fig. 1. Chemical structure of glimepiride. in type 2 diabetic patients with secondary sul-phonylurea failure. 2. Pharmacodynamic Properties 2.1 Pancreatic Effects 2.1. 1 Effects on Pancreatic -Cells The major site of activity of glimepiride is thought to be membrane receptors on pancreatic -cells, where it acts via ATP-regulated potassium (KATP) channels, resulting in membrane depolarisation and release of insulin. [1] Glimepiride has a 2.5- to 3-fold higher rate of association, an 8- to 9-fold higher rate of dissociation and a 2.5- to 3fold lower binding affinity for rat -cell tumour and insulinoma cells in vitro than glibenclamide (glyburide).[2] Direct photoaffinity labelling studies in rat -cell tumour membranes in vitro show that glimepiride binds to a 65kD protein and glibenclamide to a 140kD protein, both believed to be part of the same sulphonylurea receptor since each agent inhibits the binding of the other to these proteins.[3] Different binding affinities in rats have been thought to result in differential effects of these agents on insulin production. However, binding of glimepiride to mouse pancreatic islet cell membranes was similar to that of glibenclamide, as was the ability of glimepiride to inhibit KATP channels in these cells.[4] Glimepiride is also internalised into pancreatic -cells, where it associates with secretory granules in a manner similar to that of glibenclamide.[5] This internalisation is thought to reflect insulinotropic mechanisms of glimepiride other than at potassium channels, as suggested by cationic flow studies in rat islet cells.[6] Within -cells and adipocytcs, it reduces gluco-/hexokinase binding to porin proteins, which is thought to play a role in glucose © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. sensing and oxidative phosphorylation.[7] Exposure of insulinoma cells to glimepiride in vitro produced dose-related increases in the expression of glucokinase mRNA and GLUT2 (a glucose transporter).[8] Studies in isolated perfused rat pancreas[9,10] show that glimepiride stimulates biphasic insulin release, similar to that seen with glibenclamide,[10] with a rapid initial peak followed by a slower, sus tained second phase.[9,10] Glimepiride did not stim ulate glucagon release in these 2 trials;[9,10] indeed, one trial showed a modest inhibition of glucagon secretion with both glimepiride and glibenclam ide [9, 10] 2,1.2 Effects on Blood Glucose Levels and Insulin Secretion Compared with placebo, glimepiride decreases blood glucose and increases blood insulin levels, with maximum effects during the first 4 hours after the dose. A 3-day crossover study [11] in 14 patients with type 2 diabetes found significantly greater peak reductions in blood glucose (4.1 vs 1.9 nmol/ L) and increases in plasma insulin (41 vs 28 mU/L) and C-peptide (1.8 vs 1.4 mg/L) with glimepiride 2 mg/day than placebo (p < 0.05). The area under the curve (AUC) for blood glucose versus time was significantly lower with glimepiride than placebo over postdose hours 0 to 4 (reported as 9.0 vs 10.7 mmol/L) and hours 4 to 10 (reported as 7.9 vs 9.9 mmol/L). AUC values for plasma insulin versus time (reported as 29 vs 19 mU/L) and C-peptide versus time (reported as 1.4 vs 1.1 mg/L) were significantly higher with glimepiride over hours 0 to 4 but not over hours 4 to 10.[11] Effects of the Ml (hydroxy) metabolite of glimepiride have been studied only in healthy volunteers; Ml 1.5mg induced a 12% reduction in minimum serum glucose and a 9% reduction in mean glucose concentrations Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) 565 Fig. 2. Effects of glimepiride on mean blood glucose levels in the 24 hours following administration. Blood glucose was evaluated in 86 patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus on the 14th day of therapy with glimepiride 1, 2, 4 or 8mg once daily, glibenclamide (glyburide) 10 mg/day or placebo. Mean changes in blood glucose levels from baseline, over the periods from 0 to 4, 4 to 8, 8 to 12, 12 to 24 and 0 to 24 hours after administration of study drugs, were calculated from areas under the blood glucose-time curves.[14] All values for active treatment groups were statistically different from placebo (p < 0.05). from 0 to 4 hours after administration compared with placebo (no comparison was made will) the parent drug).[12] Glimepiride may also have greater immediate effects on blood glucose levels than glibenclamide. Significantly greater reductions in blood glucose over 0 to 4 hours postdose occurred in 14 patients with type 2 diabetes after 4 days of glimepiride 2 mg/day than after glibenclamide 10.5 mg/day.[13] The peak decrease in blood glucose between breakfast and lunch was 6.0 mmol/L with glimepiride and 5.1 mmol/L with glibenclamide (p < 0.05), and the blood glucose AUC was reported as 8.5 versus 9.0 mmol/L (p < 0.05). No significant differences were noted in blood glucose profiles between the overlapping periods from 0 to 10 hours and 4 to 10 hours. [13] ® Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. A 2-week unpublished dose-response study (protocol 104) found at best a weak dose-response relationship after glimepiride 1, 2, 4 or 8 mg/day versus placebo or glibenclamide 10 mg/day in 86 type 2 diabetes patients.[14] Mean blood glucose levels over all postdose periods from 0 to 24 hours on day 14 were significantly different from placebo in all active treatment groups (fig. 2). However, the change in mean blood glucose over the whole period from 0 to 24 hours after the dose varied, reducing by 1.8, 1.3, 1.1 and 3.1 mmol/L in the glimepiride 1, 2, 4 and 8 mg/day groups, respectively, and 2.5 mmol/L in the glibenclamide group, compared with a 2.6 mmol/L increase in blood glucose in the placebo group.[14] See section 4.1 for effects in studies of longer duration. Hyperglycaemic and hyperinsulinaemic clamp studies have been used to characterise the effects Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Glimepiride: A Review of glimepiride on insulin secretion, but results of different studies are equivocal. In 14 patients with type 2 diabetes,[15] higher plasma insulin levels were observed during a hyperglycaemic clamp on day 7 with glimepiride 5 mg/day treatment than with placebo (AUC 377 vs 271 pmol/L • h, p < 0.005). Blood glucose levels after termination of the clamp decreased to 4.7 mmol/L with glimepiride and 6.2 mmol/L with placebo, but the greater decrease in glucose with glimepiride did not promote a reduction in insulin secretion.[15] A similar study in 15 nonobese patients[16] compared glimepiride l0mg, glibenclamide l0mg or placebo during the clamp on day 7, after 6 days at half these doses daily. The increases in insulin from mean basal levels were 10.2, 12.8 and 5.7 mU/L with these 3 agents, respectively (p < 0.02 between active treatments and placebo). The same treatment protocol was used in 9 nonobese patients who underwent a euglycaemic hyperinsulinaemic clamp.[16] During the clamp, blood glucose decreased with all treatments (not statistically significant) and plasma insulin increased by 35, 34.7 and 30.1 mU/L in glimepiride, glibenclamide and placebo groups, respectively, suggesting increased insulin secretion with the active drugs compared with placebo (p < 0.01). Glimepiride and glibenclamide resulted in more glucose metabolism per unit of insulin than placebo (0.09 and 0.1 vs 0.03 kg • min per mU/L, p < 0.01), which may indicate greater tissue sensitivity to insulin.[16] However, euglycaemic and hyperglycaemic clamp studies indicated that neither glucose utilisation nor insulin sensitivity increased during 4 months' glimepiride therapy in 6 obese patients with type 2 diabetes (reported in an abstract).[17] It is not clear whether the differences in results between this 4-month study and the 1-week treatment[16] are a result of differences in duration of treatment, patient body-weight or other factors. The risk of exercise-induced hypoglycaemia during glimepiride therapy was examined in 167 patients with type 2 diabetes.[18] Patients were stabilised on glimepiride 3 mg/day or glibenclamide 10 mg/day for 2 to 4 weeks, then randomised to exercise or no exercise groups. Exercise con- 569 sisted of 1 hour on a bicycle ergometer starting 1 hour after the dose on days 1 and 7. There were no significant differences in blood glucose AUC between drugs in patients who exercised. However, insulin AUC was reported to be significantly lower with exercise than without exercise in giimepiride recipients (reported as -59.4 pmol/L, p = 0.0001) but less difference was seen in glibenclamide recipients (reported as -16.8 pmol/L, p = 0.023), or for C-peptide AUCs (reported as -0.31 nmol/L, p < 0.0001 for glimepiride and -0.01 nmol/L, p = 0.85 for glibenclamide). Hypoglycaemia occurred in 3 of 45 glimepiride and 2 of 43 glibenclamide recipients who exercised but not in patients who did not exercise. Despite similar exercise-induced reductions in blood glucose, glimepiride was associated with a greater exercise-induced reduction in insulinaemia than glibenclamide. The investigators suggest that this may reduce the risk of hypoglycaemia during exercise (although it did not in this trial). Further studies are needed to examine whether exercise during glimepiride therapy produces sustained decreases in hyperinsulinaemia with long term treatment and any reduction in hypoglycaemia. The effects of glimepiride 2 mg/day for 2 weeks on blood glucose over the period from 0 to 4 hours after breakfast were not significantly different when the drug was given 30 minutes before break fast or immediately before breakfast.[19] The results of this crossover study in 123 patients with type 2 diabetes suggest that glimepiride may be administered immediately before the first meal of the day. 2.2 Extrapancreatic Effects The evidence for potential extrapancreatic effects of glimepiride is inconclusive, but suggests no major differences between this drug and other agents of the sulphonylurea class. In a euglycaemic clamp study in normal rats receiving a low insulin infusion (6 mU/kg/min), glimepiride 0.1 mg/kg/day increased the rate of metabolic clearance of glucose (MCR), which demonstrates an increase in insulin activity.[20] In © Adis International Limited All rights reserved. Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) 570 contrast, glimepiride alone had no effects on MCR at low or high (30 mU/kg/min) insulin infusion rates in streptozotocin-diabetic rats, but when administered with insulin 5 U/day it substantially improved insulin response over that with insulin 5 U/day alone. The investigators suggest that glimepiride may contribute to overcoming insulin resistance.[20] The effects of the combination of glimepiride and insulin on glucose utilisation appeared to be at least additive. A euglycaemic clamp study in hepatic vein catheterised dogs showed a doubling of hepatic glucose disposal after 1 week of glimepiride 0.1 mg/kg/day.[21] However, the drug induced no change in glucose utilisation in the liver or peripheral tissues in 5 patients with type I (insulindependent) diabetes mellilus.[21] which tends to suggest a lack of extrapancreatic effects in humans. Studies are now needed to determine the effects of glimepiride on hepatic glucose disposal in patients with type 2 diabetes. Studies in dogs show that a lower ratio of total plasma insulin increases to total blood glucose decreases occurred after oral glimepiride 90 g/kg (0.03) than oral glibenclamide 90 g/kg (0.16), gliclazide 1.8 mg/kg (0.11), or glipizide l80 g/kg (0.7).[22] Investigators claimed that this low ratio for glimepiride showed that the drug had greater insulin-independent effects on blood glucose than other sulphonylureas.[23] However, when in vitro glycogenesis and lipogenesis are stimulated by either glimepiride [dose required to produce 50% of maximal effect (ED5o) 1.7 and 0.4 mol/L, respectively] or glibenclamide (ED 50 2.9 and 0.8 mol/L) in murine 3T3 adipocytes, peak responses were similar between the 2 drugs.[24] Glucose transport and GLUT4 tr anslocatio n wer e bo th activated by glimepiride and glibenclamide, which had similar effects in insulin-resistant and non-insulinresistant adipocytes.[25] In rat cardiomyocytes, unlike adipocytes, glimepiride had no acute effect on glucose transport, but increased glucose uptake after chronic exposure,[26] probably through enhancement of expression of glucose transporters GLUTl and GLUT4.[27] © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. Langtry & Balfour Glimepiride did not alter insulin binding to skeletal muscle insulin receptors in KK-Ay mice. In rat fibroblasts overexpressing human insulin receptors in vitro, both glimepiride and insulin altered glycerol incorporation into diacylglycerol, indicating an effect at an intracellular stage occurring after interaction with the insulin receptor.[28] 2.3 Cardiovascular Effects KATP channels are thought to play a role in cardioprotective mechanisms that may be inhibited by sulphonylureas. Although known to interact with KATP channels in pancreatic islet cells (see section 2.1.1), glimepiride, unlike glibenclamide, is thought to have no effects at cardiovascular KATP channels in humans.[29] Healthy volunteers were given an intravenous infusion of glimepiride, glibenclamide or placebo before the start of an intra-arterial infusion of diazoxide, a specific KATP channel opener that enhances forearm blood flow (FBF).[29] Glibenclamide significantly inhibited the stimulatory effects of diazoxide on FBF, but neither placebo nor glimepiride had any effect on this parameter. Furthermore, the ability of norepinephrine (noradrenaline), serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT), potassium chloride and prostaglandin F2a to induce contractions in rat aorta in vitro was inhibited by glimepiride.[30] In contrast, glibenclamide attenuated responses to prostaglandin F2a, but not to norepinephrine, serotonin or potassium chloride. Data from in vitro and in vivo studies.[31] in rats (table I) and dogs are consistent with the previous observations. They suggest that the modest effects of glimepiride on KATP channels, blood vessels or the heart were milder and affected fewer animals compared with the same dosage of glibenclamide. In open-chest anaesthetised dogs, glimepiride had milder effects than glibenclamide or gliclazide in inducing ST-segment elevation, increasing coronary resistance, myocardial oxygen extraction and serum potassium levels, and reducing coronary blood flow and the mechanical activity of the heart.[31] Drugs 1998 Apr: 55 (4) Glimepiride: A Review 571 Table I. Effects of glimepiride (GLI), glibenclamide (glyburide, GLB) or placebo (PL) on in vitro and in vivo cardiovascular parameters in rats[31] Abbreviations and symbols: IC5o = 50% inhibitory concentration; IV = intravenous; KATP channels = ATP-sensitive potassium channels; MAP = mean arterial pressure; STZ = streptozotocin; = increase; = decrease; * p < 0.05 vs comparator. _________________________ The effects of glimepiride on electrical activity of isolated rabbit heart muscle have been examined in vitro.[32] Electrical threshold, conduction time and effective refractory periods were not substantially altered by either glimepiride or chlorprop-amide, but increased significantly (p < 0.01) with glibenclamide in this mode l. 3. Pharmacokinefic Properties and Drug Interactions The pharmacokinetics of glimepiride and its active Ml (hydroxy) and inactive M2 (carboxy) metabolites have been determined using HPLC[33] in patients with type 2 diabetes and healthy volunteers. Major pharmacokinetic variables are listed in table II. 3.1 Absorption and Distribution A glimepiride 1 mg dose was completely absorbed after oral administration.[34] In singledose studies in healthy volunteers, peak plasma concentrations (Cmax) of glimepiride and the area under © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. the plasma concentration-time curve (AUG.) were generally proportional to the dose. In 27 healthy volunteers, Cmax increased from 24.3 to 103.5 g/L after 0.25 to 1 mg doses,[37] and in 12 healthy volunteers it rose linearly from 103.2 to 550.8 g/L over 1 to 8mg doses.[36] AUC increased from 72 to 339 g/L • h after 0.25 to 1 mg doses[37] and from 326 to 2634 g/L • h after 1 to 8mg doses.[36] The glimepiride Cmax occurred 0.7 to 2.8 hours after administration of single doses of the drug (tmax) to healthy volunteers and 2.4 to 3.75 hours after single or multiple doses in patients with type 2 diabetes (table II). Plasma protein binding of glimepiride is recorded as 99.4%[40] and the volume of distribution (Vd) as 8.8L.[41] There were no major differences between Cmax, tmax or AUC values after 1 day and those after 7 days of administration of glimepiride 0.5 or 1 mg once daily to 9 patients with type 2 diabetes.[35] Multiple doses did not result in accumulation in 42 patients receiving glimepiride 4, 8 or 16mg daily and pharmacokinetics were generally linear over this dosage range.[42] Drugs 1998 Apr; 56 (4) Langtry Balfour 572 Table II. Pharmacokinetics of glimepiride (GLI) and its M1 (hydroxy) metabolite after oral administration of the parent drug Reference Badian et al.[34] Kaku et al.[35] 12 HV SD1 GLI Ml GLI 88 2.7 449 3.1 20 3.9 134 3.3 29.6 2.4 75.9 GLI 27.6 2.6 73.0 GLI M1 GLI M1 89 3.75 303 23.3 4.5 5 NIDDM SD 0 .5 4 NIDDM MD 0.5 od x 7 days SD1 12 HV Ratheiser et al.[38] Rosenkranz[39] 27 HV 42 HV 11 LD + (h) AUC (ug/L • h) t1/2 (h) Compound CL(L/h) [ml/min] dose) 2.7 [45] 8.6 [143] AeM1M2 (% of total 31.8 3.5 GLI M1 103.2 2.3 326 24 2.8 133 SD2 GLI 176.8 2.4 668 42.1 2.8 210 SD4 M1 GLI 307.8 2.1 1297 M1 76.7 3.3 479 GLI 550.8 2.8 2634 M1 135.9 3.4 853 SD 0.25 SD 0.5 GLI GLI 24.3 1.2 72 2.0 61 .2 0.7 125 1.0 36.6 38.1 SD1 GLI 103.5 1.3 339 1.5 44.9 34.5 2.6 164 2.7 SD 0.25-1.5 M1 GLI M1 GLI 72-187 SD1 SD1 110.8 2 3.2 3.3 [55.3] 8.8 [146] 3.1 3.6 3.2 [53.5] 1.3 5.6 10.2 [170] 3.2 [53.6] 2.5 1.5 10.0 [166] 3.0 8.8 0.5-4 3.4 [56.5] 1.5 10.1 [169] 2.7 1.5-2 t1/2a (h) 52 99.4 358.3 118.8 SD6 Nakashima et al.[371] tmax Dose (mg) MD 1 od x 7 days Malerczyk et al.[36] Cmax Study participants 3.2 =50 3-3.5 213-529 NIDDM a Overall half-life of all phases. Abbreviations: AeM1M2 = amount excreted into the urine as M1 and M2 (carboxy) metabolites; AUC = area under the plasma concentrationtime curve; CL = total body clearance; Cmax = peak plasma concentration; HV = healthy volunteers; LD = liver disease (periportal fibrosis, mononuclear infiltration with connective tissue, fat metamorphosis with bridging necrosis, connective tissue infiltration); MD = multiple dose; NIDDM = type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus; od = once daily; SD = single dose; tmax = time to Cmax; t1/2 = terminal elimination half-life. 3.2 Metabolism and Excretion Metabolism of glimepiride occurs primarily in the liver; metabolic activity in rat kidneys is onethird that of hepatic metabolism.[43] The Ml metabolite appears to be formed by cytochrome P450 enzymes (involving CYP2C9)[41] in liver microsomes, whereas the further oxidation of M1 to the M2 metabolite is effected by cytosolic alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase enzymes.[43] In healthy volunteers, the M1 metabolite appears rapidly after oral glimepiride administration, with a tmax of 1.5 to 4.5 hours. The M2 metabolite appears later than Ml, with its t, mx occurring 1.5 © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. hours after intravenous administration of Ml [12) and 2.1 to 4.5 hours after administration of oral glimepiride. 37 to 52% of an oral glimepiride dose is found in the urine as the Ml and M2 metabolites within 24 to 48 hours (table II). The total body clearance (CL) of glimepiride is not dose related, ranging from 2.7 to 3.4 L/h after 1 to 8mg oral doses (table II). CL of M1 after administration of oral glimepiride 1 to 8mg ranged from 8.6 to 10.2 L/h. The CL of M2 (19.9 L/h) has been determined only after intravenous administration of M1.[12] However, the terminal elimination half-life (t1/2 ) of glimepiride was variable after lower oral doses, being 2 hours Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Glimepiride: A Review after a 0.25mg dose, decreasing to 1 hour after a 0.5 mg dose and rising to 1.5 hours after a 1mg dose in 27 healthy volunteers.[37] Furthermore, over a range of doses from 1 to 8mg, the t'/2 of glimepiride increased from 3.2 to 8.8 hours in 12 healthy volunteers, whereas the half-life of glimepiride over all phases of elimination was within a narrower range (1.2 to 1.5 hours; table II). The halflife of the Ml metabolite was 2.7 to 3.5 hours (table II) and that of the M2 metabolite was 4.1 to 5.6 hours after oral glimepiride doses of 0.25 to 1.5mg. [38] 3.3 Pharmacokinetics in Special Populations There were no statistically significant differences in 24-hour AUC, CL and bodyweightadjusted clearance between elderly (65 years; n = 50) and younger (n = 44) patients with type 2 diabetes receiving glimepiride 6mg once daily or 3mg twice daily in a 28-day study.[44] 16 patients with type 2 diabetes and creatinine clearance (CLCR) values of 0.6 to 3 L/h (10 to 50 ml/min) received glimepiride 1 to 8mg once daily for 3 months.[45] CL was higher in patients with CLCR <1.2 L/h (<20 ml/min), and the investigators considered that this might be a result of displacement of the drug from protein binding. As CLCR decreased, CL and apparent volume of distribution (Vd/F) of glimepiride tended to increase and CL of the M1 and M2 metabolites tended to decrease. The t1/2 and mean residence lime were unaffected by renal function. Sulphonylureas are usually used with caution in patients with severe liver disease.[39] Pharmacokinetics after a dose of glimepiride 1mg were studied in 11 patients with type 2 diabetes and liver disease of unspecified severity (reported in the review by Rosenkranz[39]). No direct comparisons with pharmacokinetics in healthy individuals were conducted, but comparisons with results from other studies[34,36] suggest that urinary excretion of the M1 metabolite (51 to 443| g over 24 hours) may be reduced by liver disease. However, pharmacokinetic variables were otherwise similar to those in healthy volunteers (table II). © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. 3.4 Drug Interactions There were no significant changes to pharmacokinetics of R- or S-warfarin (Cmax, CL, Vd, half-life or protein binding,) after coadministration of a single dose;of oral warfarin 25mg with glimepiride 4 mg/day in healthy; volunteers (number not specified).[46] The mean maximum prothrombin time decreased from 16.2 to 14.6 seconds and the area under the prothrombin time versus time curve decreased from 2198 to 2118 sec • h (decreases of 9.9 and 3.6%, respectively). The clinical significance of these findings is thought to be minor[41] and the effect of warfarin on glycaemic control was not tested. Similarly, although a study in healthy volunteers found that concomitant aspirin reduced the Cmax of glimepiride by 4% and increased its AUC by 34%, pooled data from trials in diabetic patients suggested no clinically significant interaction between these 2 agents.[47] Concomitant administration of propranolol with glimepiride at unspecified dosages to healthy volunteers resulted in increases of 20% and 15% in plasma glimepiride concentrations and t1/2 , respectively.[47] These changes occurred without substantial alterations in pharmacodynamic effects in healthy volunteers, and pooled data from clinical trials suggest no clinically significant interaction between glimepiride and -blockers.[47] However, caution is recommended when propranolol or oilier -blockers are added to a pre-existing glimepiride regimen. Studies addressing potential interactions with calcium channel blockers, estrogen, fibrates, statins, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, thyroid hormone and sulphonamides have not been conducted. Pooled data from clinical trials suggest that these drugs do not interfere significantly with the activity of glimepiride,[47] but caution is recommended when they are coadministered with glimepiride. Neither cimetidine 800mg once daily for 4 days nor ranitidine 150mg twice daily for 4 days produced major changes in the AUC, Cmax, CL or Vd/F of glimepiride in 18 healthy volunteers in a trial reported as an abstract.[48] Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) 574 Langtry & Balfour © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Glimepiride: A Review The potential for interaction between sulphonylureas and highly protein bound drugs (e.g. sulphonamides, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, etc.) suggests that patients receiving glimepiride should be monitored for hypoglycaemia or loss of glycaemic control when these agents are added or withdrawn.[41] 4. Clinical Efficacy Glimepiride has been examined in placebo-controlled and dose-finding studies, comparisons with other sulphonylureas and in combination with insulin in patients with type 2 diabetes. Disease severity has varied between patients, exemplified by their status as having: • loss of glycaemic control with diet and exercise alone; • previously stable glycaemic control on other oral antidiabetic agents (mostly sulphonyl ureas); • loss of glycaemic control with other antidiabetic agents. Major outcome measures used in most clinical trials were fasting plasma glucose (FPG), glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) and 2-hour postprandial plasma glucose (PPG) levels. Other outcome indicators included serum insulin, plasma lipids and/or fasting C-peptide levels, blood pressure, bodyweight changes and insulin dosage. Data for some trials evaluated in this review were not clearly reported in the published literature and some data were taken from unpublished trial reports (listed in tables by their protocol numbers). In addition, although dosages exceeding 8 mg/day arc not currently recommended for use in patients with type 2 diabetes (section 6), dosages of up to 16 mg/day were used in several clinical trials. Because of the way study data were reported, the results seen with the higher-than-recommended dosage cannot be easily separated from those recorded for lower dosages (section 7). © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. 575 4.1 Dose-Ranging Studies and Comparisons with Placebo Glimepiride has significantly different effects on glycaemia from placebo and is active at dosages from 0.5 to 8 mg/day; once-daily regimens of up to 8 mg/day are generally as effective as twicedaily regimens. Results of double-blind multicentre randomised placebo- or dosage-comparative trials examining the effects of glimepiride 0.25 to 16 mg/day are presented in table III. All studies involving prior antihyperglycaemic therapy began with a washout period of 1 to 3 weeks; baseline values were measured at day 0 or day 1 before the start of active treatment. These studies define minimum and maximum effective dosages of glimepiride and examine dose-response effects. Although some patients had not received previous sulphonylurea therapy,[50-52] in most trials[49,53,54] patients were previously responding to other sulphonylurea agents. A 2-week Japanese trial[50] compared fixed once-daily doses of glimepiride 0.25 and 0.5mg with placebo in 93 patients and found 0.5mg to be the minimum effective dose. Although all regimens resulted in reduced FPG and PPG, only the 0.5 mg/day dosage produced reductions in FPG (-2.5 mmol/L) or PPG (-4.9 mmol/L) that were significantly different (p < 0.001) from those seen with placebo (-1.0 and -1.7 mmol/L). Reductions in HbA1c were similar across the 3 treatment arms (-1.3 to -1.5%), but were unlikely to have been a result of this short course of treatment. Results from a 14-week study of fixed glimepiride dosages in a total of 304 patients[49] suggest that responses to glimepiride continue to increase over the 1 to 8 mg/day range (table III). Significantly greater effects were seen on FPG and PPG with 4 and 8 mg/day than with 1 mg/day, and of patients with baseline HbA1C of 8%, more had values of <8% at end-point in the 8 mg/day group (14 of 31 patients, 45.2%) than the 4 mg/day group (5 of 29, 17.2%). Modest changes in body weight occurred with 4 mg/day (+0.5kg) and 8 mg/day (+0.9kg); there was no change with 1 mg/day and a loss of 1.82kg with placebo (p < 0.001 vs glimepiride). 81 Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) 576 to 92% of glimepiride patients completed the study versus 66% of placebo recipients. Glimepiride 6mg once daily and 3mg twice daily produced similar effects on FPG, PPG, HbA1C, insulin and C-peptide levels in 98 patients in a crossover study.[54] The only significant difference between dosage regimens was in mean 24hour glucose levels, which were lower after oncethan twice-daily administration (p < 0.05). In contrast, a 14-week study in 416 patients[53] found a greater reduction (by 0.6 mmol/L) in FPG from baseline when glimepiride was given as 2 daily doses rather than as a single dose (p = 0.047). At 16 mg/day (but not at 8 mg/day) a twice-daily regimen resulted in a greater reduction in HbA1C (by 0.3%; p = 0.024) than a once-daily regimen. However, there were no significant differences in reductions in FPG from baseline to end-point between groups receiving glimepiride 8 or 16mg total daily doses. Thus, at total daily glimepiride doses of 16 and possibly 8mg there appears to be an advantage in dividing the total dose in two; however, there is no clear advantage to the use of total dosages of >8 mg/day.[53] When glimepiride dosages were titrated between 1 and 8 mg/day to achieve FPG levels of 5 to 8.3 mmol/L, FPG was lower with glimepiride than placebo after 2 weeks' treatment of a total of 249 patients.[51,52] 87% of the glimepiride group and 70% of the placebo group completed the study; 34% of glimepiride and 64% of placebo recipients were receiving the highest dosages at end-point. There was a clear correlation between baseline FPG and the dosage of glimepiride at end-point. After 10 weeks, glimepiride was superior to placebo (p < 0.001) in reducing FPG (-3.3 vs -0.7 mmol/L), HbA1c (-2.4 vs -1.0%) and PPG (-6.5 vs -1.7 mmol/L). 4.2 Comparisons with Other Sulphonylureas Trials have compared glimepiride 1 to 16 mg/ day with glibenclamide 1.25 to 20 mg/day, glipizide 2.5 to 40 mg/day or gliclazide 80 to 320 mg/ day in >2300 patients with type 2 diabetes (table IV). These randomised double-blind multicentre © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. Langtry & Balfour parallel-group trials involved initial titration of dosages to achieve specific FPG goals (see table IV). All but one[55] had a washout or pretreatment period during which patients received no active drug. Baseline findings between treatments were measured at day 0 or day 1 at the start of active treatment and in each study were similar between groups. Patients enrolled into 2 of the 3 comparisons with glibenclamide had received previous glibenclamide therapy for 2 months and had FPG <l 3.9 mmol/L;[57,58]| in the third trial, patients were previously treated with diet (FPG < 16.7 mmol/L) or sulphonylureas (FPG <11 mmol/L).[56] In the gliclazide comparison,[55] patients were reported to be previously well controlled on that drug, and in the glipizide comparison,[51] patients were reported to have no response to diet or to be previously treated with sulphonylureas. 4.2.1 Comparisons with Glibenclamide (Glyburide) Dosage comparisons between agents are hampered by reporting methods, which were not consistent across trials. When glimepiride 1 to 8 mg/ day was compared with glibenclamide 1.75 to 14 mg/day,[58] distribution across the dosage ranges was similar between groups: 47% of glimepiride recipients required 8 mg/day and 47% of glibenclamide recipients required 14 mg/day. In another trial, 51 % of glimepiride recipients required 8 mg/ day, whereas 42% of glibenclamide recipients required the maximum dosage of 20 mg/day.[57] A third glibenclamide comparison reported only that the majority of patients in each group required the maximum dosage (glimepiride 16 mg/day or glibenclamide 20 mg/day). In the 1-year studies, the sole between-group differences in major outcome measures (table IV) were a greater increase in FPG with glimepiride 1 to 8 mg/day (n = 465) than glibenclamide 2.5 to 20 mg/day (n = 453) [+0.9 vs +0.5 mmol/L, p < 0.005] in 1 study[57] and a greater increase in HbA1C with glimepiride 1 to 8 mg/day (n = 427) than glibenclamide 1.75 to 14 mg/day (n = 425) [+0.25 vs +0.09%, p < 0.05] in another.[58] The increases in HbA1C were statistically signifiDrugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Glimepiride: A Review 577 Table IV. Efficacy of glimepiride (GLI) in patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus: double-blind dose-titration multicentre parallel-group randomised comparisons with other sulphonylureas. Dosages were titrated until FPG was 5 to 8.3 mmol/L (90 to 150 mg/dl)[54,56] or 3.9 to 8.3 mmol/L (70 to 150 mg/dl)[55,57,58] Reference WO, Titr, Maint and total treatment durations Dosage Total no. of FPG (mmol/L) evaluable baseline change patients baseline change baseline change NR NR HbA1c (%) PPG (mmol/L) Comparisons with glibenclamide (glyburide, GLB) Dills et al.[66] GLI 1-16mg od GLB 1.25-20mg od 289a 288a 13.1 12.9 -2.7 -2.4 8.5 8.5 -0.85 -0.83 Draeger et al.[57] 4wkWO 12wkTitr 9mo Maint 12mo 2wkWO GLI 1-8mg od 465 8.8 +0.9 8.03 +0.38 GLB 2.5-20 mg/day (od or bid) 453 8.8 +0.5" 7.80 +0.31 Protocol 311[58]l 2mo Titr 10mo Maint 12mo 2wkWO GLI 1-8mg od 427 9.5 +0.1 8.41 +0.25* 425 9.5 -0.1 8.44 +0.09 96 6.4 107 6.3 NR Titr GLB 1.75-14 mg/day NR Maint (od or bid) 12mo Comparison with gliclazide (GLC) Protocol 301 F[55) O WO GLI 1-4mg od 8wkTitr GLC 80-320 mg/day 6wk Maint (Od or bid) 14wk Comparison with glipizide (GLP) Protocol 301 [51] 3wk WO GL1 1-1 6 mg/day 12wkTitr (od or bid) 9mo Maint GLP 2.5-40 mg/day 12mo NC NC 5.02 4.99 +0.7 +0.04 -2.9 -2.8 9.2 8.5 NR NR 444 128 -2.6 8,4 -0.5 16.2 -3.3 208 12.6 -2.4 8.3 -0.4 15.8 -3.3 (od or bid) a Stratified according to high or low FPG levels. Abbreviations and symbols: bid = twice daily; FPG = fasting plasma glucose; HbA1c = glycosylated haemoglobin; Maint = maintenance; NC = no change; NR = not reported or not specified; od = once daily; PPG = 2h-postprandial plasma glucose; Titr = titration; WO = washout; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.005 vs comparator ________________________________ cant, but were considered by the investigators to be not clinically significant (clinical significance was not systematically examined). Two of 3 glimepiride/glibenclamide comparative studies found lower fasting insulin levels in glimepiride than glibenclamide groups,[57,58] and 2 trials found lower C-peptide levels with glimepiride. [56,58] No significant differences in lipid levels were seen between treatments in the 2 studies reporting lipid testing.[57,58] Overall, usual recommended dosages of glimepiride and glibenclamide were similarly effective. Patients in 2 of these trials were allowed to continue study medication for up to 2.4[57) or 2.8 years,[58,59] with no clinically relevant differences in efficacy noted between groups. © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. See section 5 for a commentary on differences in adverse events between these treatments. 4.2.2 Comparison with Gliclazide A 14-week study compared glimepiride 1 to 4 mg/day with gliclazide 80 to 320 mg/day in 203 evaluable patients and determined that glimepiride 1mg was equivalent in efficacy to gliclazide 80mg (95% confidence interval 63.3 to 86.4mg).[55] Patients were randomised to continue with gliclazide or were switched to glimepiride from previous gliclazide therapy without a washout period. Glycaemic control was good at baseline and was maintained without major variations in both treatment groups. However, FPG, PPG and HbA1c were Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Langtry & Balfour 578 relatively low (for diabetic patients) at baseline and although not significantly altered by either treatment, the lack of washout period, uncertain disease severity at baseline and short duration of therapy make it difficult to generalise these results. Further longer term comparisons between glimepiride and gliclazide are needed to determine whether differences in efficacy exist between these 2 agents. Table V. Effects of glimepiride/insulin (GI) and insulin/placebo (PI) combinations after 24 weeks' administration to 145 evaluable obese patients with type 2 (noninsulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus and secondary sulphonylurea failure (FPG 10 to 16.7 mmol/L after glimepiride 8 mg/day for 8 weeks)[60,61] Parameter Treatment groupa Baselineb End-point FPG (mmol/L) HbA1c (%) Gl PI Gl 13.9 14.4 9.7 7.6 7.6 7.6 -6.3 -6.9 -2.1 PI Gl PI 9.9 7.7 0/2 8/11 -2.2 WD due to adverse events/total WD 4.2.3 Comparison with Glipizide [51] A 1-year study enrolling 802 patients found that glimepiride 1 to 16 ing/day reduced FPG to a greater extent than did glipizide 2.5 to 40 mg/day over weeks 2 to 10 (p < 0.05). However, 51% of glimepiride and 53% of glipizide recipients required the highest dosages allowed in the study (16 and 40 mg/day, respectively) and this highest glimepiride dose is outside the usual recommended dosage range.[51] There were no between-group differences in FPG, H,bA1C or PPG at end-point. This suggests that glimepiride and glipizide have equivalent clinical efficacy, but that glimepiride may achieve a more rapid response. 4.3 Combination with insulin In patients in whom glimepiride or other sulphonylureas alone are no longer effective, a glimepiride plus insulin combination results in lower requirements for exogenous insulin and more rapid achievement of moderate control of blood glucose. Glimepiride plus insulin was compared with insulin plus placebo in a randomised double-blind trial aimed at achieving euglycaemia. Results of this trial are not yet published in full. 208 obese patients with type 2 diabetes insufficiently controlled by full dosages of sulphonylureas received glimepiride titrated up to 8mg twice daily. Those with laboratory-monitored FPG of 10 to 16 mmol/L (180 to 300 mg/dl) at the end of 8 weeks' glimepiride monotherapy (n - 145) were randomised to continue glimepiride 16 mg/day with the addition of insulin (GI group) or to receive insulin plus placebo (PI group). Insulin (70% NPH, 30% Regular; 70/30) was started at 10 U/day administered before the evening meal and adjusted weekly until laboratory-monitored FPG was 7.8 mmol/L © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. Change a GI group n = 72; PI group n = 73. b Baseline readings were taken at the end of 8wk of glimepiride therapy, before the start of insulin therapy. Abbreviations: FPG = fasting plasma glucose; HbA1c = glycosylated haemoglobin; WD = withdrawals. (140 mg/dl) [patients also self-monitored capillary blood glucose levels]. After 24 weeks, FPG and HbA1c, which had been similar between groups at baseline, had each decreased to a similar degree in the GI and PI groups (table V).[60,61] The time course of effects on FPG indicates that the GI group experienced more rapid lowering of blood glucose (fig. 3), with statistically significant differences between groups after 2 and 4 weeks of treatment. These statistical differences occurred in part because of an initial increase in FPG in the PI group.[60] Bodyweight (baseline values not reported) increased by 4.3kg in the GI group (vs 4.0kg in the PI group). However, a distinct reduction in insulin requirements was seen in the GI group; the mean daily insulin dose was 49U at end-point in the GI. group, compared with 78U in the PI group (p < 0.001). Only 4 of 72 (6%) GI patients needed >1OOU of insulin each day versus 9 of 73 (14%) PI patients. Furthermore, 95% of GI patients versus 84% of PI patients achieved the target patientmonitored capillary blood glucose range of <6.7 mmol/L.[60] There were no between-group differences in blood pressure, fasting insulin or fasting glucagon levels. Fasting C-peptide levels, however, were significantly lower at end-point in the PI group (0.6 nmol/L) than the GI group (0.8 Drugs 1998 Apr; 55(4) Glimepiride: A Review nmol/L, p < 0.001).[60] For a discussion of the incidence of hypoglycaemia in this study, see section 5. 5. Tolerability As assessed in more than 4200 patients who received the drug in US or European comparative clinical trials, glimepiride is well tolerated, with adverse events that are generally characteristic of the sulphonylurea class of antihyperglycaemic drugs.[47,62] Of the patients studied, >1500 were maintained on the drug for 1 year and >800 for >1 year.[47] >2300 additional patients received glipizide, glibenclamide or placebo in these comparative clinical trials (see section 4.2 for dosages used). Two analyses of glimepiride tolerability[47,62] reported the incidence of treatment emergent signs and symptoms (TESS; excluding signs or symptoms of hypoglycaemia) that were possibly or probably related to treatment and of deaths, discontinuations due to adverse events or other serious adverse events (DDOS). Patients included those enrolled in glimepiride and comparator groups in US and European clinical trials. The results of Duration of treatment (wk) Fig. 3. Initial reductions in fasting plasma glucose (FPG) from baseline with glimepiride 8 mg/day plus insulin (Gl, n = 72) or insulin plus placebo (PI, n = 73).[60] Patients had type 2 (noninsulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus that was resistant to sulphonylurea monotherapy. Values at 12 weeks are approximate; exact FPG values were not reported. Symbol: * p < 0.05. © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. 579 these analyses are shown in figure 4. Although clear relationships are seen between comparators in the US trials, the differences have hot been tested statistically. Nonetheless, the incidence of common TESS was higher with glimepiride than placebo, but was lower with glimepiride than glibenclamide or glipizide. The incidence of DDOS in US trials was highest in patients receiving placebo (due to the inclusion of hyperglycaemia, which occurred in 17% of patients), but was lower in glimepiride recipients than in patients receiving other sulphonylureas. In the European trials, however, the incidence of common TESS was similar across all groups and although DDOS occurred less often in glimepiride than glibenclamide recipients, these events occurred least often in patients receiving glipizide. The most common TESS occurring in patients receiving glimepiride in US and European trials included dizziness, headache, asthenia and nausea, while the most common DDOS included hyperglycaemia, surgery and myocardial infarction.[47] Serious adverse events occurred in all study groups assessed in safety reviews.[47,62] In US and European trials, the incidence of serious adverse events was 2% in placebo recipients, 8% in glimepiride recipients, 8.8% in glipizide recipients and 12.4% in patients receiving glibenclamide. The most common events occurring in glimepiride recipients were similar in nature to those seen with the other sulphonylureas, and included cardiovascular, digestive, respiratory, metabolic and nutritional events. Most of these events were not considered to be related to the use of study medication, but the incidence and nature of those that were drug-related was not reported.[47] Hypoglycaemia is known to occur in conjunction with sulphonylurea therapy, but it has a higher incidence with the use of glibenclamide than with other drugs of this class.[63] In US trials comparing glimepiride (n = 741) with placebo (n = 294), hypoglycaemia occurred at a cumulative incidence of 13.9 versus 2%.[47] In a 1-year US comparative study,[47,56] hypoglycaemia occurred in 10% of 289 glimepiride recipients and 16.3% of 288 patients receiving glibenclamide. In a 1-year US compariDrugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) 58O Langtry & Balfour Fig. 4. Tolerability of glimepiride in comparative clinical trials. Incidence of common treatment emergent signs and symptoms (TESS; excluding signs or symptoms of hypoglycaemia) and of deaths, discontinuation due to adverse events or other serious adverse events (DDOS) in patients receiving glimepiride, placebo, glibenclamide (glyburide) or glipizide in US and European clinical trials.[47] The numbers of patients in each treatment group in US trials were: placebo 294, glimepiride 2011, glibenclamide 322 and glipizide 258. In European trials they were: glimepiride 1489, glibenclamide 1132 and glipizide 115. son with glipizide, symptomatic hypoglycaemia occurred in 21.2% of 544 glimepiride recipients and 20.6% of 258 glipizide recipients.[47] The incidence of hypoglycaemia during the first month of a comparative trial was 1.7% with glimepiride and 5.6% with glibenclamide. Laboratory-confirmed hypoglycaemia was less common than symptomatic hypoglycaemia in US comparative trials; it occurred in, respectively, 1.5 and 0% of glimepiride and placebo recipients, 1.7 and 2.4% of glimepiride and glibenclamide recipients and 0.9 and 1.2% of glimepiride and glipizide recipients.[47] The suggestion that glimepiride may result in lower rates of hypoglycaemia than these other 2 sulphonylureas now requires confirmation in clinical trials specifically designed to examine this question. When glimepiride plus concomitant insulin (GI) was compared with insulin plus placebo (PI) for 6 months,[60] similar proportions of patients in the 2 groups experienced adverse events (92% GI and 90% PI). The most common adverse events in this © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. study were reported to be of short duration and consistent with hypoglycaemia (but were not confirmed by blood tests). There was also a higher incidence of mild hypoglycaemia (51 vs 37%) and lower incidence of moderate hypoglycaemia (11 vs 15%) with GI than PI. Two GI patients dropped out of the study after randomisation (not because of hyperglycaemia or adverse events). However, of the 11 patients in the PI group who dropped out, 8 withdrew because of inadequate glycaemic control or reasons potentially related to this. 6. Dosage and Administration Glimepiride monotherapy may be added to a regimen of diet and exercise in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The usual starting dosage of glimepiride in the US is 1 to 2mg administered orally once daily with the first main meal of the day.[41] Thereafter, dosages are individualised according to FPG and HbA1c levels. Dosage titration should take place at 1- to 2-week intervals on the Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) 581 Glimepiride: A Review basis of blood glucose response; increments in daily dosage should not exceed 2mg at a time. HbA1C levels should be monitored at 3- to 6-month intervals during therapy; these and FPG levels help to determine the minimum effective dose and to detect the development of primary or secondary failure. Usual maintenance dosages of glimepiride are 1 lo 4mg once daily. The use of dosages of >8 mg/day is not recommended. In the UK, the recommended starting dosage is glimepiride 1 mg/day. This can be gradually increased to 6 mg/day, but dosages of >4 mg/day are thought to be of benefit only in exceptional situations.[64] In patients in whom the effectiveness of glimepiride appears to decrease after a period of effective use (i.e. those with secondary failure), glimepiride may be combined with insulin. The manufacturer recommends that FPG at initiation of this combination be in the range of >8.32 mmol/L (>150 mg/dl). In the US, the recommended glimepiride dosage in this combination regimen is 8mg once daily with the first main meal of the day. Low-dose insulin is added to this and adjusted upward at approximately weekly intervals as needed to control fasting blood glucose. Capillary blood glucose levels should be monitored daily during maintenance therapy and insulin dosages adjusted according to these and to HbA1C levels.[41] Patients previously maintained on other antihyperglycaemic drugs may be switched to glimepiride without a transition period. However, because of the possibility of an overlap of effect of longeracting sulphonylurcas, such as chlorpropamide, when patients are switched from these agents to glimepiride they should be monitored closely for signs of hypoglycaemic reactions during the first 1 to 2 weeks.[41] In elderly, malnourished or debilitated patients or those with renal or hepatic impairment glimepiride treatment should be initiated, titrated and mainlained cautiously to avoid hypoglycaemic reactions. Glimepiride is not recommended for use in women who are pregnant or breastfeeding or in children.[41] © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. It is recommended that patients receiving glimepiride are informed of potential risks of cardiovascular mortality that are thought to be associated with the use of sulphonylurea drugs and that they are told about alternative treatments.[41] 7. Place of Glimepiride in the Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Type 2 diabetes mellitus is characterised by insulin secretory defects and insulin resistance.[65] As a slowly progressive disorder, it usually re sponds initially to diet and exercise alone. However; a gradual deterioration of giycaemic control often results in the need for oral treatment with antidiabetic agents. Further possible deterioration may necessitate the use of combinations of oral agents and possible eventual use of exogenous insulin injections either alone or combined with oral agents.[66,67] Sulphonylurea agents are the mainstays of oral antidiabetic therapy. They stimulate insulin release from the pancreas[66] and are thought to be a good first choice for most patients with type 2 diabetes.[68] However, metformin may be recommended for patients who are overweight, since it tends to reduce bodyweight.[69] Glimepiride is conveniently administered in a once-daily dose with breakfast. It has few known drug interactions. Although adverse events associated with its use are characteristic of the sulphonylurea class, it may produce fewer total events or serious adverse events and less hypoglycaemia than glibenclamide. It has been suggested that this difference in incidence of hypoglycaemia may be caused by inappropriately high initial glibericlamide dosages rather than resulting from an intrinsically lower risk with glimepiride (W. Waldhausl, personal communication), but in any case the difference requires confirmation in wider patient use. In relation to other sulphonylureas, glimepiride appears to be as efficacious as glibenclamide or glipizide and possibly also gliclazide when used to treat patients with type 2 diabetes not well control-led by diet. Furthermore, it may reduce blood gluDrugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) Langtry & Balfour 582 cose more rapidly than glipizide and appears to produce less hypoglycaemia than glibenclamide. Pharmacological studies suggest that glimepiride has fewer or less severe effects on cardiovascular variables than glibenclamide and similar effects to gliclazide (section 2.3); additional studies of these features in clinical settings would help to clarify the importance of these findings. In addition, further studies are needed to determine the efficacy of glimepiride monotherapy in relation to gliclazide or metformin and to evaluate combinations of glimepiride with metformin or other oral anti-diabetic agents. Yearly secondary failure rates range from 1.4% with gliclazide to 5.6% with glipizide.[70] When sulphonylureas fail to maintain glycaemic control and subsequent combination oral antidiabetic therapy is unsuccessful, insulin monotherapy may provide a return to near normal blood glucose levels. However, this return is often at the expense of an increase in bodyweight (not normally seen with sulphonylurea/insulin combinations) and the use of large doses of insulin each day (e.g. >1 U/kg).[71] When combined, sulphonylureas and insulin are thought to have complementary actions, with insulin decreasing blood glucose levels and so preventing hyperglycaemia-induced reductions in -cell function, allowing the sulphonylurea to promote endogenous insulin release.[72] It has been suggested that combinations of oral agents may not be effective in patients with secondary failure who have little remaining -cell function;[72] some -cell function is. also required if combination of a sulphonylurea with insulin is to be effective.[73] A combination of exogenous insulin plus glimepiride was able to reduce glycaemia to normal levels in most patients, and the glimepiride component substantially reduced the requirements for exogenous insulin. Glimepiride plus insulin appeared to act more rapidly to reduce blood glucose, which may be why mild hypoglycaemia was more common with this combination. Although body-weight changes occurred with glimepiride plus insulin, it would be interesting to see if future studies show the same increase in bodyweight when the combination is used in nonobese patients or in the © Adis International Limited. All rights reserved. lower (8 mg/day) glimepiride dosages that are now recommended. In many therapeutic trials, upper dosage limits exceeded (hose now recommended for use. In some of the comparative trials that titrated study drug dosages to achieve specific blood glucose endpoints, for example, a majority of patients had dosages titrated to 16 mg/day before they met the therapeutic targets. With 8 mg/day not then established as the acceptable upper limit for dosage, a 16 mg/ clay dosage was also used in the insulin combination study. However, subsequent studies showed little difference between dosages of glimepiride 8mg once or twice daily. Until further studies are conducted using only dosages within the recommended range, it cannot be determined whether some effects seen with glimepiride may be exaggerated by the use of higher doses that will not be used in practice. However, since dosages >8 mg/ day did not appear to provide additional benefits over those seen with lower dosages (see section 4.1), it is possible that restricting the dose to 8 mg/day will result in a lowering of the risk of adverse events. In any case, further examination of the effects within the now recommended dosage range is needed. In conclusion, glimepiride is a new once-daily sulphonylurea that may have a slightly different profile of adverse events compared with other agents in its class. Future studies should examine the use of glimepiride in combination with other oral antidiabetic agents in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. In the meantime, glimepiride may be considered an alternative to other sulphonylureas for use as monotherapy in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus insufficiently controlled by diet and exercise alone. It may also be used in combination with insulin in patients in whom diet and exercise plus oral antihyperglycaemic therapy have failed to control blood glucose. References 1. Kramer W, Müller G, Geisen K. Characterization of the molecular mode of action of the sulfonylurea, glimepiride, at bcells. Horm Metab Res 1996 Sep; 28: 464-8 2. Muller G, Hartz D, Punter J, et al. Differential interaction of glimepiride and glibenclamide with the -cell sulfonylurea Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4) 583 Glimepiride: A Review receptor. I. Binding characteristics. Biochim Biophys Acta Biomembr 1994 May 11; 1191:267-77 3. Kramer W, Miiller G, Girbig F, et al. Differential interaction of glimepiride and glibenclamide with the -cell sulfonylurea receptor. II. Photoaffinity labeling of a 65 kDa protein by [3H]glimepiride. Biochim Biophys Acta 1994 May 11; 1191: 278-90. 4. Schwanstecher M, Mönner K, Panten U. Inhibition of K+ channels and stimulation of insulin secretion by the sulfonylurea, glimepiride, in relation to its membrane binding in pancreatic islets. Pharmacology 1994 Aug;49: 105-11 5. Marynissen G, Smets G, Klöppel G, et al. Internalization of glimepiride and glibenclamide in the pancreatic B-cell. Acta Diabetol 1992 Nov; 29: 113-4 6. Lebrum P, Malaisse WJ. Cationic and secretory effects of glimepiride and glibenclamide in perifused rat islets. Pharmacol Toxicol 1992 May; 70: 357-60 7. Muller G, Korndörfer A, Kornak II, et al. Porin proteins in mitochondria from rat pancreatic islet cells and while adipocytes: identification and regulation of hexokinase binding by the sulfonylurea glimepiride. Arch Biochem Biophys 1994 Jan; 308: 8-23 8. Porzio O, Magnaterra R, Marlier LNJL, et al. 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Combined therapy with a sulfonylurea plus evening insulin: safe, reliable, and becoming routine. Horm Metab Res 1996 Sep; 28: 430-3 The pharmacological treatment of hyperglycemia in NIDDM. Diabetes Care 1996 Jan; 19 Suppl. 1: S54-61 Campbell IW, Hewlett HCS. Worldwide experience of metformin as an effective glucose-lowering agent: a metaanalysis. Diabetes Metab Rev 1995 Sep; 11 Suppl. I: S57-62 Harrower ADB. Comparison of efficacy, secondary failure rate, and complications of sulfonylureas. J Diab Comp 1994 OctDec;8:20l-3 Johnson JL, Wolf SL, Kabadi UM. Efficacy of insulin and sulfonylurea combination therapy in type II diabetes: a metaanalysis of the randomized placebo-controlled trials. Arch Intern Med 1996 Feb 12; 156: 259-64 Rosenstock J. Combination glimepiride-insulin 70/30 therapy for NIDDM. Postgrad Med 1997 Jun Special Report: 26-32 Groop LC. Sulfonylureas in NIDDM. Diabetes Care 1992 Jun; 15 (6): 737-54 Correspondence: Heather D. Langtry, 41 Centorian Drive, Private Bag 65901, Mairangi Bay, Auckland 10, New Zealand. E-mail: [email protected] Drugs 1998 Apr; 55 (4)