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Diabetes Update - Integrating Clinical Trials with EMR Practicalities Michael Shannon, MD PMG Endocrinology, Olympia WA Outline of Talk Newly released and upcoming medications: the incretins, DPP-IV inhibitors, and what’s coming Revised ADA/EASD and AACE guidelines: focus on potency, safety, cost Introduction of EPIC project at Providence Role of a Clinical Advancement Team in promoting best clinical practices The Diabetes Toolbox 2010 Drug Class (First in Class) FDA Approval Insulin 1922 (first use) Sulfonylurea (chlorpropamide) 1958 Biguanides (metformin) 1995 Alpha-glucosidase inhibitor (acarbose) 1995 Thiazolidinedione (troglitazone) Meglitinide (repaglinide) Incretins (exenatide) 1997 1997 2005 DPP-IV Inhibitors (sitagliptin) 2006 What’s New and What’s Coming Incretins: GLP-1 agonists and analogs Incretins: DPP-IV inhibitors Sodium-Glucose Transport Proteins-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors: Dapagliflozin Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Glucagon-like peptide-1 is an incretin, a gut hormone that increases the release of insulin Many effects of GLP-1: Increases insulin sensitivity Inhibits glucagon release Inhibits gastric emptying Increases satiety and decreases food intake Native GLP-1 improves glucose control but the short half-life limits its use (needs pump) GLP-1 Agonists and DPP-IV Inhibitors Mixed Meal Intestinal GLP-1 Release Active GLP-1 DPP4 Rapid Inactivation Inactive GLP-1 t1/2 = 1-2 min GLP-1 Agonists and Analogs Exenatide: GLP-1 receptor agonist (BID) Liraglutide: GLP-1 analog (QD) Under development: Once-weekly exenatide long-acting release (LAR) Taspoglutide Lixisenatide Others in various stages GLP-1 Inhibitors: Exenatide Modification of GLP-1 to prevent degrading Modest benefit in HbA1c 0.7-1.1% Significant nausea (52% vs 8% for insulin) and emesis; RJ Heine et al, Ann Int Med 2005 Some weight loss as well Significant heterogeneity in response in clinical experience (some all-stars, some fail) Safety warnings about pancreatitis, kidneys Liraglutide Approved January 2010; once-daily injection Associated with similar modest decrease in HbA1c of 0.7% - 1.1% with slightly more reduction in one trial (LEAD-6) Less renal limitations than exenatide Possible association with pancreatitis and there is suggestion of rare thyroid tumors in rats so special warnings for medullary thyroid cancer DPP-IV Inhibitors Sitagliptin (Januvia) and saxagliptin (Onglyza) and linagliptin (Tradjenta) Associated with modest decrease in HbA1c of 0.5% - 0.8%; can be dosed with ESRD Minimal side effects (possible more minor infections) All are pregnancy Category B – unclear why Minimal long-term safety data – possible offtarget interactions with diverse DPP-IV targets SGLT-2 Inhibitors Sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 is a protein that aids in glucose reabsorption from the kidney Natural mutation: familial renal glycosuria Inhibition of this protein leads to increased glucosuria – in early studies appears to reduce A1c and body weight, with possible side effect of increased UTIs and yeast infections Several in development (dapagliflozin filed with FDA, remogliflozin, sergliflozin) Final Word on New Therapies None of these have been in wide use for long Lessons of rosiglitazone: hemoglobin A1c is a surrogate endpoint, not the true goal of care None of these have any microvascular or macrovascular endpoints (trials underway) Most of these drugs cost upwards of $6/day Interesting products – but what is their impact? Is lowering A1c the goal of care? Diagnosis is a fairly soft endpoint, but death is unequivocal. Edwin AM Gale, Lancet 2003 ADA/EASD DM2 Algorithm Updated in 2009 based on clinical trials and collective clinical judgment and experience of authors Evaluates glucose reductions, non-glycemic effects that could reduce diabetic complications, safety, tolerability, ease of use, and cost of each intervention Provides treatment algorithm with intervention tiers DM Nathan et al, Diabetes Care 2009 ADA/EASD DM2 Algorithm Tier 1: Well validated core therapies At diagnosis: Lifestyle + Metformin Lifestyle + Metformin + Basal insulin Lifestyle + Metformin + Intensive insulin Lifestyle + Metformin + Sulfonylurea STEP 1 STEP 2 Tier 2: Less well validated therapies Lifestyle + Metformin + Pioglitazone Lifestyle + Metformin + GLP-1 agonist DM Nathan et al, Diabetes Care 2009 STEP 3 Lifestyle + Metformin + Pioglitazone + Sulfonylurea Lifestyle + Metformin + Basal insulin Diabetes interventions by tiers Tier 1 Interventions (‘well-validated core’) Lifestyle changes with diet and exercise (1.0-2.0)* Metformin (1.0-2.0) Insulin (1.5-3.5) Sulfonylureas (1.0-2.0) Tier 2 Interventions (‘less well-validated’ core) Thiazolidinediones (pioglitazone) (0.5-1.4) GLP-1 agonists (exenatide) (0.5-1.0) Others (less A1c lowering, less evidence, or costlier): α-Glucosidase inhibitors (0.5-0.8), Glinides (0.5-1.5) Pramlintide (0.5-1.0), DPP-IV inhibitors (0.5-0.8) DM Nathan et al, Diabetes Care 2009 Comments on treatment choices Tier 2 options may be considered when weight loss is major goal (exenatide) or when hypoglycemia is major concern (pioglitazone and exenatide, not rosi) α-Glucosidase inhibitors, glinides, pramlintide, and DPP-4 inhibitors appropriate for selected patients Starting or intensifying insulin preferred to third oral Algorithm is cautious in use of newer treatments DM Nathan et al, Diabetes Care 2009 AACE Algorithm Released by American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists in October 2009 Stated by AACE to include a variety of choices based on first-line, second-line, and third-line therapies as well as secondary factors (weight, risk of hypoglycemia) Emphasizes wider choices Ends up somewhat overwhelming algorithm HW Rodbard et al, Endocrine Practice 2009 Diabetes Toolbox: A Critical Look Drug Class A1C% Cost/Mo Sulfonylureas (glimepiride, etc) 1.2-2.0 4-12 Metformin 1.2-2.0 4-12 Thiazolidediones (pio 45 qday) 0.8-1.4 245 GLP-1 agonist (exenatide 10 bid) 0.8-1.2 271 DPP-IV (sitagliptin 100 qday) Human Insulin Insulin Analogs (vials) 0.6-0.8 No limit No limit 193 ~25 ~80 Insulin Analogs (pens) No limit ~100 Drugstore.com Indications for Insulin Therapy Severe hyperglycemia at diagnosis or at a later point despite aggressive treatment To meet glycemic goals - hyperglycaemia despite maximum doses of oral agents Decompensation of other organ systems that limits use of other oral agents Early cost-effective potent treatment A Broader Toolbox Doesn’t Always Improve Clinical Outcomes Diabetes is a progressive disease More choices can decrease ability to intensify care (SS Iyengar, 2000) Use algorithms as a guideline (joint ADAEASD consensus statement or AACE/ACE) Individual patients may have specific issues that require tailoring algorithms to their needs Guidelines need to be available and accessible! From Trials and Guidelines to Implementing Best Practices Providence Health & Services has 27 hospitals, major health plan, ~2000 doctors Despite this, limited ways to disseminate best practices and learn from other regions Two reasons for Clinical Advancement Teams: Collect local successes and share the team practices and order sets that allow these successes And… the entire system is going onto EPIC, for a new EMR 28 Washington Pneumonia Mortality: Prov Centralia Sepsis Mortality, NOT Present on Admission, Prov Centralia Mortality on Ventilator (use on Day 1), Prov Everett Central Line Blood Stream Infections, Prov Everett Mortality on Ventilator (Use after Day 1), Prov Sacred Heart, Spokane Heart Failure Readmissions, Prov Holy Family, Spokane Sepsis Mortality, Present on Admission, Prov Holy Family, Spokane 29 Oregon Pneumonia Readmissions, Prov Hood River AMI Readmissions, Prov Milwaukie Neonatal Morbidity/Mortality, Prov St Vincent, Portland 501-1500 grams) (infants Heart Failure Readmissions, Prov Milwaukie TIE! Out Patient Data Percent of patients over 65 with documented pneumococcal vaccination: Winner: PMG South Eagle Point @ 91% [near Medford OR] (Range: 26% - 91%; P H & S average: 51%) Percent of ambulatory diabetics who have not had an LDL test drawn in the past year: Winner: PMG West Linn (in West Linn, OR--South of Portland) 29% (range: 29% - 70%, P H & S average: 56%) Present of ambulatory adult diabetics with most recent HgAic > 9% who have not had a HgA1c drawn the past year: Winner: tie between PMG North Plaza [by Providence Portland medical Center Hospital in Portland] AND PMG Teaching Clinic, Milwaukie (near Providence Milwaukie) @ 12% 30 (range: 70- 12, P H & S average: 19) Clinical Guidance for EHR Build Clinical Advisory Council Content Build As Needed Decisions Workflow Build Clinical Advancement Teams 6 to 8 Collaborative Build Sessions As Needed Decisions • “Think Tanks” in 32 disciplines • Mainly virtual every 2 weeks; one inperson orientation • • • Physicians Travel to Seattle April-August Quick decisions, e.g. correcting an omission or typographical error Non-physician Clinicians Clinical Advisory Council Coordinates and oversees “Clinical Guidance” to support the Quality Strategic Framework. Core subgroups Safe Medication Formulary Workgroup Interdisciplinary Content Review Physician Content Review Workgroup Clinical Decision Support Workgroup Other task forces / workgroups as needed Clinical ROI Workgroup Regulatory / Accreditation Workgroup 32 specialty Clinical Advancement Teams Clinical Advancement Teams ID Wave 1: Early Readiness or Long Review Cycles ID Wave 2: Shorter Review Cycles I D Wave 3: Delayed Readiness or Short Cycles 1 Adult Primary Care 13 Dermatology 24 Behavioral Health 2 Hospital Medicine 14 Orthopedics 25 Occupational Medicine 3 Pediatrics 15 General Surgery 26 Rheumatology 4 Urgent / Immediate Care 16 Pulmonary / Sleep 27 Rehabilitation Medicine 5 Emergency Medicine 17 Neurology and Stroke 28 Infectious Disease / Travel Medicine 6 Endocrinology and Diabetes Care 18 Neurosurgery and Spine 29 Otolaryngology and Audiology 7 Obstetrics 19 Nephrology 30 Wound Care 8 Women's Health / Breast Health / Gynecology 20 Pain Management / Anesthesiology 31 Radiology 9 Heart and Vascular 21 Urology 32 Ophthalmology 10 Oncology 22 Gastroenterology 11 Physiatry 23 Critical Care 12 Palliative Care 34 Who is on a Clinical Advancement Team? Clinical Advancement Teams Physicians Non-physician Clinicians Ambulatory Inpatient Endocrinology/Diabetes: 2 endos, 2 hospitalists, 3 PharmD, 3 PCPs, 3 nurse specialists, 4 CDEs, and one laboratory specialist Inclusive “Mountain” of Subject Matter Experts Clinical Champions SME representatives CA T Translate clinical input into the EHR Phone, email Print outs Quick conversations Section meetings hundreds of Subject Matter Experts CAT Team: “People Skills” for EPIC Clinical Champions SME representatives Translate clinical input into the EHR CAT Goals to Achieve Order sets that are usable and up to date (no, they don’t still make insulin ultralente) Workable dashboard for best clinical practices When was my last diabetic eye exam? How few clicks to order a urine microalbumin? Extractable data for disease management registries and (likely) for payor demands/ACO Find local successes and disseminate them ADA/EASD DM2 Algorithm Tier 1: Well validated core therapies At diagnosis: Lifestyle + Metformin Lifestyle + Metformin + Basal insulin Lifestyle + Metformin + Intensive insulin Lifestyle + Metformin + Sulfonylurea STEP 1 STEP 2 Tier 2: Less well validated therapies Lifestyle + Metformin + Pioglitazone Lifestyle + Metformin + GLP-1 agonist DM Nathan et al, Diabetes Care 2009 STEP 3 Lifestyle + Metformin + Pioglitazone + Sulfonylurea Lifestyle + Metformin + Basal insulin Content to Review Inpatient: Diabetic Ketoacidosis Admission Insulin drip order set Subcutaneous Insulin order sets Outpatient: Diabetes Outpatient Visit Thyroid disease Special groups: pediatrics, obstetrics CAT Team: Identifying Barriers Fear of loss of autonomy Fear of technology changes to workflow Generalized resistance to intrusion on “the way it’s always been” (territorial behavior) Many ways to contribute feedback • • • • • Add a comment to the online collaboration tool Phone / email your Clinical Champion or subject matter expert representative Discuss at a sub-section meeting or team meeting Physician liaisons / point persons: print-outs Quick conversations Conclusion There are interesting new therapies available and on the horizon, but all still have limited long-term safety and hard endpoint data The ADA/EASD guidelines support first-tier use of metformin, sulfonylureas, and insulin, with second-tier use of GLP-1 and pioglitazone Providence will use EPIC to take best local practices and spread success across system Clinical Advancement Teams will draw out local experts to grow best care in Providence Diabetes Quality Metrics are Here Pay for Performance is Evolving EMR and Integration are Continuing and our diabetes care can’t be “last in”