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Degludec hospital trial: A randomized controlled trial comparing insulin degludec U100 and glargine U100 for the inpatient management of patients with type 2 diabetes.
Diabetes, obesity & metabolism
  • Rodolfo J Galindo
  • Francisco J Pasquel
  • Priyathama Vellanki
  • Radica Alicic, Providence Health Care, Spokane, Washington, USA.
  • David W Lam
  • Maya Fayfman
  • Alexandra L Migdal
  • Georgia M Davis
  • Saumeth Cardona
  • Maria A Urrutia
  • Citlalli Perez-Guzman
  • Karla Walkiria Zamudio-Coronado
  • Limin Peng
  • Katherine Tuttle, Providence Health Care, Spokane, Washington, USA.
  • Guillermo E Umpierrez
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2022
Keywords
  • washington,
  • spokane
Abstract

AIMS: Limited data exist about the use of insulin degludec in the hospital. This multicentre, non-inferiority, open-label, prospective randomized trial compared the safety and efficacy of insulin degludec-U100 and glargine-U100 for the management of hospitalized patients with type 2 diabetes.

METHODS: In total, 180 general medical and surgical patients with an admission blood glucose (BG) between 7.8 and 22.2 mmol/L, treated with oral agents or insulin before hospitalization were randomly allocated (1:1) to a basal-bolus regimen using degludec (n = 92) or glargine (n = 88), as basal and aspart before meals. Insulin dose was adjusted daily to a target BG between 3.9 and 10.0 mmol/L. The primary endpoint was the difference in mean hospital daily BG between groups.

RESULTS: Overall, the randomization BG was 12.2 ± 2.9 mmol/L and glycated haemoglobin 84 mmol/mol (9.8% ± 2.0%). There were no differences in mean daily BG (10.0 ± 2.1 vs. 10.0 ± 2.5 mmol/L, p = .9), proportion of BG in target range (54·5% ± 29% vs. 55·3% ± 28%, p = .85), basal insulin (29.6 ± 13 vs. 30.4 ± 18 units/day, p = .85), length of stay [median (IQR): 6.7 (4.7-10.5) vs. 7.5 (4.7-11.6) days, p = .61], hospital complications (23% vs. 23%, p = .95) between treatment groups. There were no differences in the proportion of patients with BG

CONCLUSION: Hospital treatment with degludec-U100 or glargine-U100 is equally safe and effective for the management of hyperglycaemia in general medical and surgical patients with type 2 diabetes.

Clinical Institute
Kidney & Diabetes
Specialty
Endocrinology
Specialty
Nephrology
Citation Information
Rodolfo J Galindo, Francisco J Pasquel, Priyathama Vellanki, Radica Alicic, et al.. "Degludec hospital trial: A randomized controlled trial comparing insulin degludec U100 and glargine U100 for the inpatient management of patients with type 2 diabetes." Diabetes, obesity & metabolism (2022)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/katherine-tuttle/303/