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©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Diabetes. Dec 15, 2016; 7(20): 599-604
Published online Dec 15, 2016. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v7.i20.599
Published online Dec 15, 2016. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v7.i20.599
Table 1 Clinical trials of technosphere insulin using Gen2 device
| Ref. | Rosenstock et al[9] | Bode et al[10] |
| Design | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 24 wk-duration | Randomized, open-label, 24 wk-duration |
| Type of diabetes | Type 2 | Type 1 |
| Intervention | TI (n = 177) vs placebo (n = 177), both groups were on oral agents | TI (n = 174) vs prandial aspart (n = 170). Both groups received basal insulin (NPH or detemir, or glargine) |
| Mean HbA1c levels at baseline | 8.26% | 7.93% |
| Reduction in HbA1c vs baseline | -0.8% with TI and -0.4% with placebo | -0.21% with TI vs -0.4% with aspart |
| Reduction in mean HbA1c with TI vs comparator | -0.4% vs placebo (95%CI: -0.57 to -0.23) | 0.19% vs aspart (95%CI: 0.02 to 0.36) |
| Proportions of patients reaching HbA1c ≤ 7% | 38% with TI vs 19% with placebo (P = 0.0005) | 18% with TI vs 31% with aspart (P = 0.01) |
| Proportions reporting adverse effects | 61% TI vs 51.1% placebo | 58% TI vs 43% aspart |
| Proportions of patients reporting hypoglycemia | 67.8% TI vs 30.7% placebo (P < 0.0001) | 96% TI vs 99.4% aspart (P = 0.06) |
| Proportions of patients reporting cough | 23.7% TI vs 19.9% placebo (difference not statistically significant) | 31.6% TI vs 2.3% aspart P < 0.05 |
| Withdrawal due to cough | 1.1% with TI vs 3.4% with placebo | 5.7% with TI vs 0% with aspart |
| Change in mean weight | + 0.5 kg TI vs -1.1 kg placebo (P < 0.0001) | -0.4 kg with TI vs +0.9 kg aspart (P = 0.01) |
| Change in mean FEV1 (L) | - 013 L with TI vs -0.04 L with placebo | -0.07 L with TI vs -0.04 L with aspart |
| Withdrawal due to adverse effects | 4% with TI vs with 5.1% placebo | 9.2% with TI vs with 0% aspart |
Table 2 Clinical trials of technosphere insulin using the Med-Tone device
| Ref. | Raskin et al[14] | Rosensensk et al[12] |
| Design | Randomized, open label, 2 yr-duration, pulmonary safety trial | Randomized, open-label, 52-wk duration |
| Type of diabetes | Types 1 and 2 | Type 2 |
| Groups of subjects and intervention | TI (n = 938), usual diabetes care (n = 951), control subjects without diabetes (n = 164) | Glargine qhs + prandial TI (n = 334) vs1biaspart insulin bid (n = 343) |
| Proportions of patients with adverse effects | 79% TI vs 71% usual care | 84% TI vs 89% biaspart |
| Mean HbA1c at baseline | 8.7% | 8.7% |
| Reduction in HbA1c vs baseline | -0.59% with TI and -0.50% with usual care | -0.68% with TI/glargine vs -0.76% with biaspart |
| Reduction in HbA1c with TI vs comparator | 0.09% (not significant) | 0.07% (not significant) |
| Proportions of patients reporting hypoglycemia | 39.5% TI vs 39.1% usual care | 48% glargine/TI vs 69% biaspart. OR 0.4 (95%CI: 0.3-0.5) |
| Proportions of patients reporting cough | 27.8% TI vs 4.4% usual care | 33% glargine/TI vs 6% biaspart |
| Withdrawal due to cough | 4.7% TI vs 0% usual care | 2% glargine/TI vs 0% biaspart |
| Change in mean weight | Not reported | + 0.9 kg glargine/TI vs +2.5 kg biaspart. Mean difference 1.6 kg (95%CI: -2.4 to -0.7) |
| Decline in mean FEV1 (liters) | More decline in TI group vs usual care. Mean difference 0.037 (95%CI: 0.017-0.06) | -0.13 glargine/TI vs -0.09 biaspart (difference not significant) |
| Withdrawal due to adverse effects | 11% TI vs 0.6% usual care | 9% glargine/TI vs 4% biaspart |
Table 3 Candidate patients for technosphere insulin
| Patients with type 1 diabetes who are taking basal insulin once daily, but prefers to take their prandial insulin in the inhaled formulation |
| Patients with type 2 diabetes uncontrolled on oral agents, and are reluctant to start subcutaneous insulin due to needle phobia or other reasons |
| Patients already on subcutaneous prandial insulin who develop frequent late post-prandial hypoglycemia (4-5 h after meals) |
| Any patient who develops skin reactions to insulin subcutaneous injections such as lipoatrophy or lipohypertrophy |
| In combination of automated artificial pancreas to provide rapid insulin delivery right after meals[20] |
Table 4 Advantages and limitations of technosphere insulin
| Advantages |
| Relatively easy and non-painful administration |
| Flexible timing of administration either inhaled directly before meals or within 20 min after finishing a meal[10] |
| Hypoglycemia is less frequent than subcutaneous insulin, particularly late postprandial hypoglycemia |
| Weight gain is slightly less pronounced than subcutaneous insulin |
| Limitations |
| Frequent cough (24%-33% of patients) |
| Available only as prandial short-acting insulin. Hence, long-acting basal subcutaneous insulin should be added in patients with type 1 diabetes |
| Slightly less effective than subcutaneous insulin |
| Need for baseline and then serial pulmonary function testing |
| Safer to switch to subcutaneous insulin in case of upper or lower respiratory infections to avoid exacerbation of the disease and possible unreliable pulmonary absorption |
| No data available for pediatric and pregnant populations |
| Limited strength options and difficult fine titration of doses |
| Lack of long-term safety data |
| High cost, e.g., average price of ninety 4-unit cartridges and 2 inhalers is $271[21] |
- Citation: Mikhail N. Place of technosphere inhaled insulin in treatment of diabetes. World J Diabetes 2016; 7(20): 599-604
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-9358/full/v7/i20/599.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4239/wjd.v7.i20.599
