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Half doses of diabetes drugs can prevent disease

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WASHINGTON | Wed Jun 2, 2010 6:34pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Low doses of GlaxoSmithKline's diabetes drug Avandia combined with metformin can prevent diabetes without causing the most common side-effects, Canadian doctors reported on Wednesday.

Taking half a dose of Glaxo's combination pill reduced by two-thirds the risk that patients would go from having high blood sugar -- pre-diabetes -- to full type-2 diabetes, the researchers reported in the Lancet medical journal.

Fourteen percent of the patients treated with the drugs developed diabetes after four years, compared to 39 percent of those given placebo, the researchers found.

The effect would likely be the same with Avandia's rival drug in the same class, Takeda's Actos, said Dr. Bernard Zinman of Mount Sinai Hospital at the University of Toronto, who led the study.

"I think it is a class effect," Zinman said in a telephone interview.

Actos, known generically as pioglitazone and Avandia, known generically as rosiglitazone, belong to a class of drugs called thiazolidinediones, which help the body better use insulin.

Type-2 diabetes is caused as the body gradually loses its ability to respond to insulin, a condition called insulin resistance. Overeating, a lack of exercise, genes and other factors all play a role.

As insulin works less and less well, levels of glucose rise in the blood, damaging blood vessels and organs. The beta cells in the pancreas begins to lose their ability to make insulin.

SIDE-EFFECTS

Avandia and Actos work well to help and even prevent diabetes. But they have side-effects, including fluid retention, heart failure and, possibly, heart attacks.

Glaxo said this week it had settled more lawsuits alleging Avandia caused heart attacks.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is reviewing data on possible heart risks from the drug.

Glaxo, which will be looking to save its faltering market for Avandia, paid for the study. Sales of Avandia topped $3 billion in 2006, but fell to $1.2 billion in 2009.

Metformin is an older drug that also helps the body use insulin, but it can cause upset stomach.

So Zinman decided to try a half-dose of both to see if that would be effective and cut back the side-effects.

His team recruited 207 patients with pre-diabetes and gave them either two pills a day of combined Avandia and metformin or placebos. They followed them for almost four years.

"The side-effects were not there -- the weight gain, fluid retention, the gastrointestinal side-effects," Zinman said.

The study has not lasted long enough to tell whether heart failure or heart attack rates would rise measurably, but Zinman said fluid retention often points to future potential heart effects.

Both Avandia and Actos will soon be available generically, and metformin has long been, meaning a potentially inexpensive way to prevent diabetes, he said.

Lifestyle changes like exercising and losing weight also work to prevent diabetes, but people do not follow them well, he noted.

"The concept of combining submaximum doses of effective drugs to maintain efficacy and reduce side-effects is an attractive one," Dr. Thomas Buchanan of the University of Southern California wrote in a commentary.

The International Diabetes Federation estimates that 300 million people worldwide have pre-diabetes and 230 million have diabetes.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

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Comments (5)
digitaldoctor wrote:
Of course, the smarter would just prescribe low dose metformin, say 250 to 500mg tabs, twice daily. As the glucose readings worsen, bump up the metformin to 1,000 twice daily. TZDs like actos and avandia raise your risk of heart attacks. Metformin is generic and that is why the drug was not studied alone. Major scam !

Jun 02, 2010 8:54pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
alamofarmsdoc wrote:
Another classic drug company PR move to create disease where none exists using an expensive drug then selling it to the media and my patients. Shame on GSK and for those in the media who present this. If you treat blood sugar of 80 you can make it 60. You may even be able to make this persist for a while and claim you’re preventing pre-diabetes. Pure crap.

Jun 02, 2010 11:25pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
VitaminD3Man wrote:
Vitamin D prevents diabetes…the old fashioned way…you know- 700 million years of evolving with it.

Take your snake oil meds and I’ll maintain my vitamin D health and let’s see who dies first?

Jun 03, 2010 2:19am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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