Drug Lowers Conversion to Type 2 Diabetes by 81% in
Multicenter Study
Reported
June 09, 2008
Newswise — In a research study of hundreds
of patients facing the prospect of developing type 2 diabetes, the oral drug
pioglitazone (brand name: Actos®) reduced the rate of conversion to the disease
by 81 percent in the active therapy group compared to those taking a placebo,
the study leader, Ralph A. DeFronzo, M.D., reported June 9 during the 68th
Scientific Sessions of the American Diabetes Association in San Francisco.
Individuals randomized to take pioglitazone also recovered part of their insulin
production and their bodies became more sensitive to insulin, therefore using it
more efficiently to control plasma glucose or blood sugar, Dr. DeFronzo,
professor and chief of diabetes at The University of Texas Health Science Center
at San Antonio, said.
He designed and led the four-year ACTos NOW for the Prevention of Diabetes (ACT
NOW) Study that enrolled 602 individuals with impaired glucose tolerance, a
prediabetic state, along with 102 healthy controls.
Currently no drug is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for
treatment of prediabetes to prevent progression to diabetes.
The maker of Actos®, Takeda Pharmaceuticals of Japan, funded the study but gave
the researchers complete freedom to perform the study and interpret the results,
whether positive or negative, Dr. DeFronzo said.
The study was conducted at eight of the foremost centers for diabetes in the
U.S. The American Diabetes Association labeled the ACT NOW presentation late
breaking and clinically relevant.
Pioglitazone corrects two core defects in type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance
and beta cell failure. Beta cells are the cells in the pancreas that secrete
insulin.
“The drug is the best insulin sensitizer we have and it also preserves beta cell
function,” Dr. DeFronzo said. “The clinical response in this study is next to
astronomical, not 100 percent but obviously highly significant.”
Pioglitazone came to the U.S. market in 2000 and the original
mechanism-of-action studies were conducted by the Division of Diabetes in the UT
Health Science Center’s School of Medicine.
Subjects in the ACT NOW study were treated at the clinical research area of the
Texas Diabetes Institute, a comprehensive diabetes treatment and research
facility staffed by UT Health Science Center faculty physicians in a University
Health System facility on San Antonio’s West Side.
About 1 in 10 individuals with impaired glucose tolerance shows signs of
diabetic retinopathy (damage to blood vessels in the retina that may affect
vision), and 5 percent to 10 percent of prediabetic individuals are estimated to
have peripheral neuropathy (blood vessel damage in extremities). A drug to treat
impaired glucose tolerance and prevent further decline is therefore of great
importance.
“Prediabetes, I believe, is really diabetes,” Dr. DeFronzo said.
In the ACT NOW study, 10 subjects with impaired glucose tolerance developed
diabetes while taking pioglitazone. That compared to 45 subjects with impaired
glucose tolerance who developed diabetes after receiving a placebo. Patients
were randomly assigned to receive either active drug or a placebo.
Forty-two percent of individuals in the pioglitazone arm of the study returned
to normal glucose tolerance at the study’s end versus 28 percent of those in the
placebo arm.
Pioglitazone was safe and well tolerated during the study. Weight gain and edema
were more frequent in the treatment group.
Source : Newswise |