Diabetes. 1997 Feb;46(2):265-70.
Reduction of postprandial hyperglycemia and
frequency of hypoglycemia in IDDM patients on
insulin-analog treatment. Multicenter Insulin Lispro
Study Group.
Anderson JH Jr, Brunelle RL, Koivisto VA, Pfutzner
A, Trautmann ME, Vignati L, DiMarchi R.
Lilly Research Laboratories, Indianapolis, Indiana
46285, USA.
Insulin lispro, an insulin analog recently developed
particularly for mealtime therapy, has a fast
absorption rate and a short duration of action. We
compared insulin lispro and regular human insulin in
the mealtime treatment of 1,008 patients with IDDM.
The study was a 6-month randomized multinational (17
countries) and multicenter (102 investigators)
clinical trial performed with an open-label
crossover design. Insulin lispro was injected
immediately before the meal, and regular human
insulin was injected 30-45 min before the meal.
Throughout the study, the postprandial rise in serum
glucose was significantly lower during insulin
lispro therapy. At the endpoint, the postprandial
rise in serum glucose was reduced at 1 h by 1.3 mmol/l
and at 2 h by 2.0 mmol/l in patients treated with
insulin lispro (P < 0.001). The rate of hypoglycemia
was 12% less with insulin lispro (6.4 +/- 0.2 vs.
7.2 +/- 0.3 episodes/30 days, P < 0.001),
independent of basal insulin regimen or HbA1c level.
The reduction was observed equally in episodes with
and without symptoms. When the total number of
episodes for each patient was analyzed according to
the time of occurrence, the number of hypoglycemic
episodes was less with insulin lispro than with
regular human insulin therapy during three of four
quarters of the day (P < 0.001). The largest
relative improvement was observed at night. In
conclusion, insulin lispro improves postprandial
control, reduces hypoglycemic episodes, and improves
patient convenience, compared with regular human
insulin, in IDDM patients.