Diabetes Care. 2000 May;23(5):639-43.
Less hypoglycemia with insulin glargine in intensive
insulin therapy for type 1 diabetes. U.S. Study
Group of Insulin Glargine in Type 1 Diabetes.
Ratner RE, Hirsch IB, Neifing JL, Garg SK, Mecca TE,
Wilson CA.
MedStar Clinical Research Center, Washington, DC,
USA. rratner@compuserve.com
Objectives:
Insulin glargine
(21A-Gly-30Ba-L-Arg-30Bb-L-Arg-human insulin) is a
biosynthetic insulin analog with a prolonged
duration of action compared with NPH human insulin.
This study compared insulin glargine with NPH human
insulin in subjects with type 1 diabetes who had
been previously treated with multiple daily
injections of NPH insulin and regular insulin.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND
Methods:
This study was a
multicenter randomized parallel-group study in which
subjects were randomized to receive premeal regular
insulin and either insulin glargine (at bedtime) or
NPH insulin (at bedtime for patients on once-daily
therapy and at bedtime and in the morning for
patients on twice-daily therapy) for up to 28 weeks.
Dose titration of both basal insulins was based on
capillary fasting whole blood glucose (FBG) levels;
the goal was a premeal blood glucose concentration
of 4.4-6.7 mmol/l.
Results:
A total of 534
well-controlled type 1 diabetic subjects (mean GHb
7.7%, mean fasting plasma glucose [FPG] 11.8 mmo/l)
were treated. A small decrease in GHb levels was
noted with both insulin glargine (-0.16%) and NPH
insulin (-0.21%; P > 0.05). Significant reductions
in median FPG levels from baseline (-1.67 vs. -0.33
mmol/l with NPH insulin, P = 0.0145) and a trend for
a reduction in capillary FBG levels were achieved
with insulin glargine. After the 1-month titration
phase, significantly fewer subjects receiving
insulin glargine experienced symptomatic
hypoglycemia (39.9 vs. 49.2%, P = 0.0219) or
nocturnal hypoglycemia (18.2 vs. 27.1%, P = 0.0116)
with a blood glucose level <2.0 mmol/l compared with
subjects receiving NPH insulin.
Conclusions:
Lower
FPG levels with fewer episodes of hypoglycemia were
achieved with insulin glargine compared with once-
or twice-daily NPH insulin as part of a basal-bolus
regimen in patients with type 1 diabetes.