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Safety and efficacy of inhaled human insulin (Exubera) during discontinuation and readministration of therapy in adults with type 1 diabetes: A 3-year randomized controlled trial. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the effects of inhaled human insulin (EXU) on lung health when stopping and restarting the therapy in adults with type 1 diabetes.
  • Over a two-year period, 290 patients used EXU while another 290 used traditional subcutaneous insulin, with various lung function tests conducted to measure any changes.
  • Results showed that while there were minor early differences in lung function favoring subcutaneous insulin, these were not significant over time, and insulin antibody levels rose and fell without adverse effects, indicating EXU therapy's impact on lung function is reversible and not harmful.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess pulmonary safety during discontinuation and readministration of inhaled human insulin (EXU; Exubera((R)) insulin human [rDNA origin]) Inhalation Powder) therapy in adults with type 1 diabetes.

Methods: Patients were randomized to receive basal insulin plus either pre-meal EXU (n=290) or a short-acting subcutaneous (SC) insulin (n=290) for 2 years (comparative phase), followed by 6 months of SC insulin (washout) and 6 months of their original therapy (readministration). Highly standardized lung function tests were performed throughout.

Results: Small treatment group differences favoring SC insulin in change from baseline forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV(1)) and carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (DL(CO)) occurred early and were non-progressive. These differences resolved during washout and recurred at the same magnitude during readministration. Both groups maintained glycemic control, and hypoglycemic event rates were similar. In the EXU group, insulin antibody (IAb) levels plateaued at 12 months, declined to near baseline levels during washout and increased during readministration to levels observed in the comparative phase.

Conclusions: FEV(1) and DL(CO) changes observed during discontinuation and readministration of EXU therapy are consistent with a reversible, non-progressive and non-pathological effect on lung function. EXU readministration is not associated with an augmented IAb response.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.diabres.2008.08.008DOI Listing

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